Authors
Niklaus J Grünwald, Erica M Goss, Kelly Ivors, Matteo Garbelotto, Frank N Martin, Simone Prospero, Everett Hansen, Peter JM Bonants, Richard C Hamelin, Gary Chastagner, Sabine Werres, David M Rizzo, Gloria Abad, Paul Beales, Guillaume J Bilodeau, Cheryl L Blomquist, Clive Brasier, Stephan C Brière, Anne Chandelier, Jennifer M Davidson, Sandra Denman, Marianne Elliott, Susan J Frankel, Ellen M Goheen, Hans De Gruyter, Kurt Heungens, Delano James, Alan Kanaskie, Michael G McWilliams, Willem Man in ‘t Veld, Eduardo Moralejo, Nancy K Osterbauer, Mary E Palm, Jennifer L Parke, Ana Maria Perez Sierra, Simon F Shamoun, Nina Shishkoff, Paul W Tooley, Anna Maria Vettraino, Joan Webber, Timothy L Widmer
Publication date
2009/7
Source
Phytopathology
Volume
99
Issue
7
Pages
792-795
Publisher
The American Phytopathological Society
Description
Phytophthora ramorum, the causal agent of sudden oak death and ramorum blight, is known to exist as three distinct clonal lineages which can only be distinguished by performing molecular marker-based analyses. However, in the recent literature there exists no consensus on naming of these lineages. Here we propose a system for naming clonal lineages of P. ramorum based on a consensus established by the P. ramorum research community. Clonal lineages are named with a two letter identifier for the continent on which they were first found (e.g., NA = North America; EU = Europe) followed by a number indicating order of appearance. Clonal lineages known to date are designated NA1 (mating type: A2; distribution: North America; environment: forest and nurseries), NA2 (A2; North America; nurseries), and EU1 (predominantly A1, rarely A2; Europe and North America; nurseries and gardens). It is expected …
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