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Quarantine Alert - Heterobasidion irregulare
The
U.C. Berkeley Forest Pathology Lab
directed by Matteo Garbelotto and the
Gonthier Lab at the
University of Turin, Italy, have jointly discovered the US military transported H. irregulare from
North America to Italy in 1944, and have spearheaded most of the research on its invasion process.
In October 2013, thanks to their efforts, Heterobasidion irregulare was included in the alert list
of fungi by the European and Mediterranean Plant Protection Organization (EPPO).
Learn more about the EPPO
The H. annosum species complex comprises necrotrophic
pathogens regarded as the most destructive disease agents of conifers.
In the past 40 years, H. annosum s.l. has been the object of more than 1,700 scientific papers,
which makes it one of the most intensively studied forest fungi. The complete genome sequence of the
fungus is now available, making H. annosum s.l. the first sequenced plant pathogenic homobasidiomycete.
Furthermore, it is one of the few examples of a forest pathogen that can be and has been controlled in managed forests.
The understanding that two sister allopatric species are now sympatric because of a human-linked intercontinental
movement of one of the two, provides the scientific community with the opportunity to understand in-depth the
ecological similarities and differences among species within the complex.
Pertinent publications from the Berkeley-Turin groups:
Giordano, L., Gonthier, P., Lione, G., Capretti, P., M., Garbelotto, M. (2013) The saprobic and fruiting abilities of the exotic forest
pathogen Heterobasidion irregulare may explain
its invasiveness. Biol Invasions DOI 10.1007/s10530-013-0538-4
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Garbelotto M., Gonthier, P. (2013) Biology, Epidemiology, and Control of Heterobasidion Species Worldwide. Annu.
Rev. Phytopathol. 51:39-59.
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Garbelotto M., Guglielmo, F., Mascheretti, S., Croucher, P., Gonthier, P. (2013) Population genetic analyses
provide insights on the introduction pathway and spread patterns of the North American forest pathogen
Heterobasidion irregulare in Italy. Molecular Ecology, 22: 4855-4869 doi: 10.1111/mec.12452.
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Gonthier, P., Lione, G., Giordano, L., Garbelotto, M. (2012) The American forest pathogen Heterobasidion irregulare
colonizes unexpected habitats after its introduction in Italy. Ecological Applications 22(8) 2135-2143.
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Gonthier, P. & Garbelotto, M. (2011) Amplified fragment length polymorphism and sequence analyses reveal massive
gene introgression from the European fungal pathogen Heterobasidion annosum into its introduced congener H. irregulare.
Molecular Ecology 20, 2756-2770
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Otrosina, W. & Garbelotto, M. (2009) Heterobasidion occidentale sp. nov. and Heterobasidion irregulare nom. nov.:
A disposition of North American Heterobasidion biological species. Mycological Research, doi:101016/j mycres 2009.09.001
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Garbelotto, M., Linzer, R., Nicolotti, G., & Gonthier, P. (2009) Comparing the influences of ecological and evolutionary
factors on the successful invasion of a fungal forest pathogen. Biol Invasions, doi: 10.1007/s10530-009-9514-4
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Linzer, R. E., Otrosina, W. J., Gonthier, P., Bruhn, J., Laflamme, G., Bussieres, G., & Garbelotto, M. (2008)
Inferences on the phylogeography of the fungal pathogen Heterobasidion annosum, including evidence of interspecific
horizontal genetig transfer and of human-mediated, long-range dispersal. Mol. Phylogenet. Evol., 46, 844-862.
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Gonthier, P., Nicolotti, G., Linzer, R., Guglielmo, F., & Garbelotto, M. (2007) Invasion of European pine stands
by a North American forest pathogen and its hybridization with a native infertile taxon. Molecular Ecology, 16, 1389-1400.
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