24 research outputs found

    One stop shop: backbones trees for important phytopathogenic genera: I (2014)

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    Many fungi are pathogenic on plants and cause significant damage in agriculture and forestry. They are also part of the natural ecosystem and may play a role in regulating plant numbers/density. Morphological identification and analysis of plant pathogenic fungi, while important, is often hampered by the scarcity of discriminatory taxonomic characters and the endophytic or inconspicuous nature of these fungi. Molecular (DNA sequence) data for plant pathogenic fungi have emerged as key information for diagnostic and classification studies, although hampered in part by non-standard laboratory practices and analytical methods. To facilitate current and future research, this study provides phylogenetic synopses for 25 groups of plant pathogenic fungi in the Ascomycota, Basidiomycota, Mucormycotina (Fungi), and Oomycota, using recent molecular data, up-to-date names, and the latest taxonomic insights. Lineage-specific laboratory protocols together with advice on their application, as well as general observations, are also provided. We hope to maintain updated backbone trees of these fungal lineages over time and to publish them jointly as new data emerge. Researchers of plant pathogenic fungi not covered by the present study are invited to join this future effort. Bipolaris, Botryosphaeriaceae, Botryosphaeria, Botrytis, Choanephora, Colletotrichum, Curvularia, Diaporthe, Diplodia, Dothiorella, Fusarium, Gilbertella, Lasiodiplodia, Mucor, Neofusicoccum, Pestalotiopsis, Phyllosticta, Phytophthora, Puccinia, Pyrenophora, Pythium, Rhizopus, Stagonosporopsis, Ustilago and Verticillium are dealt with in this paper

    The Montara oil spill: a 2009 well blowout in the Timor Sea

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    A well on the Montara platform on the Australian continental shelf blew out in August 2009 and spilled oil into the Timor Sea for 74 days. The oil, estimated at as much as 23.5 million L in total volume, spread over a large area of the shelf and eventually into Indonesian waters. This paper documents, through published literature, reports of both Australian and Indonesian governments and observations of coastal residents and fishermen the spread of the oil and attempts to estimate its impact. The lack of observers on the ocean and baseline, pre-spill data on populations of marine organisms, and delays in deploying scientific surveys after the spill severely limited efforts by the Australian government to determine damage in its territorial waters. Biological survey work was not done in Indonesian waters, but coastal residents attested to relatively severe impacts to algal farms. In addition fish landings declined in one port in southwest Timor Island

    Numerical Modeling and Imaging of Three-Dimensional Transducer Fields in Anisotropic Materials

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    Piezoelectric transducers are the basic tool for ultrasonic NDE applications and are commercially available in a wide variety of sizes, shapes and frequencies. However, the information that is typically provided for these transducers by the vendors is of limited value. This is especially true when it comes to testing of anisotropic structural materials. In this paper, a previously developed methodology to map radiation fields for piezoelecetric transducers is applied to the imaging of three-dimensional transducer fields generated in anisotropic propagation media. The processed data files are calculated for transversely (multicrystalline) isotropic materials via the Generalized Point-Source-Synthesis (GPSS) method. The synthetic data is transferred to an imaging workstation, where the 3D-transducer fields are displayed using commercially available graphic packages. The fields of circular contact-transducers of several frequencies are shown for different austenitic weld material configur ations
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