Results 171 to 180 of about 6,997 (212)
Monitoring the impacts of ash dieback on ash-associated epiphytic lichens
Pescott, Oliver +2 more
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2022
Ash dieback in Europe is caused by an invasive alien pathogen originating from East Asia, the helotialean ascomycete fungus Hymenoscyphus fraxineus. This disease first emerged in the early 1990s in NorthEastern Poland, and the pathogen successively invaded most of Europe, in total 32 countries, in the next decades, causing substantial damage and ...
Marçais, Benoit +4 more
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Ash dieback in Europe is caused by an invasive alien pathogen originating from East Asia, the helotialean ascomycete fungus Hymenoscyphus fraxineus. This disease first emerged in the early 1990s in NorthEastern Poland, and the pathogen successively invaded most of Europe, in total 32 countries, in the next decades, causing substantial damage and ...
Marçais, Benoit +4 more
openaire +3 more sources
Canadian Journal of Botany, 1976
We give further evidence of the correlation of the inception of dieback in white ash and local drought. We suggest that the marked stomatal sensitivity of ash to drought could be an important factor coupling dieback to drought.
Peter Tobiessen, Steven Buchsbaum
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We give further evidence of the correlation of the inception of dieback in white ash and local drought. We suggest that the marked stomatal sensitivity of ash to drought could be an important factor coupling dieback to drought.
Peter Tobiessen, Steven Buchsbaum
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Severity and Causes of Ash Dieback
Arboriculture & Urban Forestry, 1978Ash dieback is a disease that causes progressive death of branches and tree mortality in white ash and to a lesser extent in green ash (Fraxinus americana L., F. pennsylvanica March.). It affects all-aged trees in woodland, hedgerow, streetside, and home sites.
Craig Hibben, Savel Silverborg
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Hymenoscyphus fraxineus (ash dieback).
2021Abstract H. fraxineus is an anamorphic fungal pathogen that causes ash dieback. Due to the severity of ash dieback H. pseudoalbidus has been on the EPPO Alert list since 2007. It is not known what caused the emergence of this 'new' disease (NAPPO, 2009). Its spread in Europe is thought to be mainly by ascospores, but infected nursery
Jessica Needham, Joan Webber
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2019
Narrow-leaved ash is currently most damaged forest tree species in Croatia according to the ICP Forests programme. Damage of crowns can be mostly attributed to pathogenic fungus Hymenoscyphus fraxineus, while damage of roots and stem bases is caused by several pathogenic fungi, including Hymenoscyphus fraxineus, Armillaria spp. and Ganoderma adspersum.
Kranjec Orlović, Jelena +1 more
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Narrow-leaved ash is currently most damaged forest tree species in Croatia according to the ICP Forests programme. Damage of crowns can be mostly attributed to pathogenic fungus Hymenoscyphus fraxineus, while damage of roots and stem bases is caused by several pathogenic fungi, including Hymenoscyphus fraxineus, Armillaria spp. and Ganoderma adspersum.
Kranjec Orlović, Jelena +1 more
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Occurrence of ash dieback in stands and plantings
2015The results of forest pathology investigation carried out in 2014 in ash stands of the republic are analyzed. Incidence of damaged branches is 100%. Occurrence of the disease on the first and second stand stories are 89.9% and 73.3% consequently, and on underbrush is 14.8%. Less disease stability have young plants in forest nurseries, occurrence of the
Yaruk, A. V., Zviagintsev, V. B.
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Fungal endophytes for biocontrol of ash dieback
Julius-Kühn-Archiv, vol. 48264. Deutsche Pflanzenschutztagung: Pflanzenschutz im System denken; 7. bis 10. Oktober 2025; Technische Universität Braunschweig; – Kurzfassungen der Vorträge und Poster –Schulz, B. +6 more
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