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Hudson, André O (Ed.)ABSTRACT The fungal genusNeonectriacontains many phytopathogenic species currently impacting forests and fruit trees worldwide. Despite their importance, a majority ofNeonectriaspp. lack sufficient genomic resources to resolve suspected cryptic species. Here, we report draft genomes and assemblies forNeonectria magnoliaeNRRL 64651 andNeonectria puniceaNRRL 64653.more » « lessFree, publicly-accessible full text available November 27, 2025
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LeBoldus, Jared M; Lynch, Shannon C; Newhouse, Andrew E; Søndreli, Kelsey L; Newcombe, George; Bennett, Patrick I; Muchero, Wellington; Chen, Jin-Gui; Busby, Posy E; Gordon, Michael; et al (, Annual Review of Phytopathology)Outbreaks of insects and diseases are part of the natural disturbance regime of all forests. However, introduced pathogens have had outsized impacts on many dominant forest tree species over the past century. Mitigating these impacts and restoring these species are dilemmas of the modern era. Here, we review the ecological and economic impact of introduced pathogens, focusing on examples in North America. We then synthesize the successes and challenges of past biotechnological approaches and discuss the integration of genomics and biotechnology to help mitigate the effects of past and future pathogen invasions. These questions are considered in the context of the transgenic American chestnut, which is the most comprehensive example to date of how biotechnological tools have been used to address the impacts of introduced pathogens on naïve forest ecosystems.more » « less
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Hulcr, Jiri; Barnes, Irene; De Beer, Z. Wilhelm; Duong, Tuan A.; Gazis, Romina; Johnson, Andrew J.; Jusino, Michelle A.; Kasson, Matthew T.; Li, You; Lynch, Shannon; et al (, Symbiosis)One of the main threats to forests in the Anthropocene are novel or altered interactions among trees, insects and fungi. To critically assess the contemporary research on bark beetles, their associated fungi, and their relationships with trees, the international Bark Beetle Mycobiome research coordination network has been formed. The network comprises 22 researchers from 17 institutions. This forward-looking review summarizes the group’s assessment of the current status of the bark beetle mycobiome research field and priorities for its advancement. Priorities include data mobility and standards, the adoption of new technologies for the study of these symbioses, reconciliation of conflicting paradigms, and practices for robust inference of symbiosis and tree epidemiology. The Net work proposes contemporary communication strategies to interact with the global community of researchers studying symbioses and natural resource managers. We conclude with a call to the broader scientific community to participate in the network and contribute their perspectives.more » « less
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