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Biological Invasions: a threat to California Ecosystems • Taught by Dr. Matteo Garbelotto [email protected] – Office: Third floor Hilgard Hall – Office hours: by appointment
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Biological Invasions: a threat to California Ecosystems Taught by Dr. Matteo Garbelotto –[email protected]@berkeley.edu –Office: Third floor.

Dec 15, 2015

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Page 1: Biological Invasions: a threat to California Ecosystems Taught by Dr. Matteo Garbelotto –Matteog@berkeley.eduMatteog@berkeley.edu –Office: Third floor.

Biological Invasions: a threat to California Ecosystems

• Taught by Dr. Matteo Garbelotto– [email protected]– Office: Third floor Hilgard Hall

– Office hours: by appointment

Page 2: Biological Invasions: a threat to California Ecosystems Taught by Dr. Matteo Garbelotto –Matteog@berkeley.eduMatteog@berkeley.edu –Office: Third floor.

Course info

• One two hour lecture per week• One quiz every week on previous lecture• Tainter and Baker Forest Pathology book• Some readings will be posted on the Lab’s

Web site: www.matteolab.org» Link to UCB course» POWERPOINT LECTURES, assigned readings» Posted on Fridays

Page 3: Biological Invasions: a threat to California Ecosystems Taught by Dr. Matteo Garbelotto –Matteog@berkeley.eduMatteog@berkeley.edu –Office: Third floor.

Course info

• One final quiz (3 questions out of 9)• One short Powerpoint presentation• Possibility to improve grade by writing paper

(5 pages) on same topic as oral presentation• One computer lab: use of software for genetic

analyses (Dr. Osmundson)• One field activity Saturday April 27th:

participation in UCB SODBLITZ (www.sodblitz.org)

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GRADING

• 25% class and field activity participation

• 25% weekly quizzes

• 25% final quiz

• 25% oral presentation

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EMERGENT FOREST DISEASES: ARE THEY EMERGENT FOREST DISEASES: ARE THEY A THREAT TO NATIVE ECOSYSTEMS?A THREAT TO NATIVE ECOSYSTEMS?

• Intro to Disease • Native Diseases• Invasive fungi and emergent

disease I• Invasive fungi and emergent

disease II• Exotic CA pathogens

(EPCA): White Pine Blister rust

• EPCA:Dutch Elm Disease• EPCA: Pine Pitch Canker,

Colored Canker of Sycamore

• EPCA: Sudden Oak Death• Genetic Analyses of Invasive

spp• EPCA: Other invasive

Phytophthoras• Habitat change: Annosum root

rot• Host change: Cypress canker;

Armillaria root Rot• Newly introduced disease and

US introduced: Xylella, 1000 canker, Phragmidium violaceum, Chestnut blight

• Finals

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EMERGENT FOREST EMERGENT FOREST DISEASES: ARE THEY A DISEASES: ARE THEY A

THREAT TO NATIVE THREAT TO NATIVE ECOSYSTEMS?ECOSYSTEMS?

Matteo Garbelotto

U.C.Berkeley

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Disease: injurious physiological activity caused by the continuous irritation by a primary causal factor and expressed in characteristic pathological conditions called symptoms

Disease: any disturbance of a plant that interferes with its normal, structure, function or economic value

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Primary causal factor=agent

ABIOTIC

BIOTIC (incl. VIRUSES)

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BIOTIC DISEASES caused by:

Parasitic plantsBacteriaFungiOomycetesViruses

Nematodes

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Tree of Life, from Patterson & Sogin, 1992 

Page 11: Biological Invasions: a threat to California Ecosystems Taught by Dr. Matteo Garbelotto –Matteog@berkeley.eduMatteog@berkeley.edu –Office: Third floor.

Phorodenron villosum on oak

Leafy mistletoe

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Fungi• Eukaryotic organisms, heterotrophs,

characterized by chitin and B-glucans in the cell wall, feeding through absorption, reproducing by spores and producing a vegetative structure made up of tubular structures,branched, irregular, and indefinite in growth (modified from B. Kendric 1992)

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Fungal hyphae and mycelium

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There are no differentiated structures in fungi, but hyphae can generate…

mycelia stroma rhizomorphs

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Ascomycetes (predominance of n in life cycle)

Sexual spores (ascospores) are generated within “sacks”called asci

*

Ascus

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Ascomycota

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Ascomata

apothecium perithecium cleistothecium

*

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pseudothecium

*

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Richiami sulle entità biotiche

Basidiomycetes (Div. Basidiomycota) n+n or rarely 2n is predominant in life cycle

Sexual spores, basidiospores,are carried naked on surface of “clubs”called basidia

*

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Basidiomycota

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spores

basidia

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conidiomi

conidiofori liberi

acervulo

picnidio

*

*

*

*

Marssonina betulae

Cryphonectria sp.

anamorphic fungi no sexual stage

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Oomycetes (Div. Oomycota) Kingdom: straminopila (prev. Chromista)

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zooconidio di oomicete

*

Important group of forest pathogens, includes the genera

Pithyum and Phytophthora

Although apparently similar to the fungi, oomycetes are an example of convergence, basically the same morphology wasselected because of their lifestyle similar to that of the fungi.they all have a water dependant phase, they have cellulose inthe cell wall, and are mostly 2n

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Types of disease: biotic vs. abiotic or..

• Infectious: a disease that is caused by a pathogen which can spread from a diseased to a healthy host.

• Non-infectious: a disease that is caused by an environmental or host factor. It is not spread between a diseased and healthy individual.

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Types of diseases

• Foliar diseases and blights

• Stem diseases: cankers, wilts

• Trunk rots

• Root diseases

• Seedling diseases

• Fruit and flower disease