Development of contingency plans for use against exotic pests and diseases of trees and timber, 1: Problems with the detection and identification of exotic plant pathogens of forest trees

In Australia, native and introduced trees are at risk from many exotic diseases, both known and unknown. To exclude these diseases effectively quarantine must be based on sound biological principles. The influence on quarantine of several biological factors is discussed; those considered include life cycle of the pathogen, alternate hosts, methods of introduction, the lag period between introduction of a pathogen and its detection, deficiencies in disease records, taxonomic resources for identification and others. The close relationship between quarantine measures for agricultural, horticultural, forestry and native plants, and the need for coordination in these fields, is stressed. Case histories of the initial detection and spread of several introduced tree diseased are analysed to show difficulties which can arise in early detection of outbreaks and proposed eradication campaigns. Whilst contingency plans for disease outbreaks must be developed, it is concluded that the cheapest and most effective control measure is disease exclusion by quarantine. In Australia more stringent quarantine measures are needed to achieve this goal

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: 130363 Walker, J.
Format: biblioteca
Published: 1987
Subjects:DIAGNOSTICO, ENFERMEDADES EXOTICAS, ROYA, ARBOLES FORESTALES, ARBOLES MADERABLES, ORGANISMOS PATOGENOS, CICLO VITAL, HOSPEDEROS, TRANSMISION DE ENFERMEDADES, CUARENTENA, IDENTIFICACION, MELAMPSORA, PUCCINIA, ENFERMEDADES FUNGOSAS, AUSTRALIA,
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spelling KOHA-OAI-BVE:427882020-02-03T21:06:10ZDevelopment of contingency plans for use against exotic pests and diseases of trees and timber, 1: Problems with the detection and identification of exotic plant pathogens of forest trees 130363 Walker, J. 1987In Australia, native and introduced trees are at risk from many exotic diseases, both known and unknown. To exclude these diseases effectively quarantine must be based on sound biological principles. The influence on quarantine of several biological factors is discussed; those considered include life cycle of the pathogen, alternate hosts, methods of introduction, the lag period between introduction of a pathogen and its detection, deficiencies in disease records, taxonomic resources for identification and others. The close relationship between quarantine measures for agricultural, horticultural, forestry and native plants, and the need for coordination in these fields, is stressed. Case histories of the initial detection and spread of several introduced tree diseased are analysed to show difficulties which can arise in early detection of outbreaks and proposed eradication campaigns. Whilst contingency plans for disease outbreaks must be developed, it is concluded that the cheapest and most effective control measure is disease exclusion by quarantine. In Australia more stringent quarantine measures are needed to achieve this goalIn Australia, native and introduced trees are at risk from many exotic diseases, both known and unknown. To exclude these diseases effectively quarantine must be based on sound biological principles. The influence on quarantine of several biological factors is discussed; those considered include life cycle of the pathogen, alternate hosts, methods of introduction, the lag period between introduction of a pathogen and its detection, deficiencies in disease records, taxonomic resources for identification and others. The close relationship between quarantine measures for agricultural, horticultural, forestry and native plants, and the need for coordination in these fields, is stressed. Case histories of the initial detection and spread of several introduced tree diseased are analysed to show difficulties which can arise in early detection of outbreaks and proposed eradication campaigns. Whilst contingency plans for disease outbreaks must be developed, it is concluded that the cheapest and most effective control measure is disease exclusion by quarantine. In Australia more stringent quarantine measures are needed to achieve this goalDIAGNOSTICOENFERMEDADES EXOTICASROYAARBOLES FORESTALESARBOLES MADERABLESORGANISMOS PATOGENOSCICLO VITALHOSPEDEROSTRANSMISION DE ENFERMEDADESCUARENTENAIDENTIFICACIONMELAMPSORAPUCCINIAENFERMEDADES FUNGOSASAUSTRALIAAustralian Forestry (Australia)
institution IICA
collection Koha
country Costa Rica
countrycode CR
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
databasecode cat-sibiica
tag biblioteca
region America Central
libraryname Sistema de Bibliotecas IICA/CATIE
topic DIAGNOSTICO
ENFERMEDADES EXOTICAS
ROYA
ARBOLES FORESTALES
ARBOLES MADERABLES
ORGANISMOS PATOGENOS
CICLO VITAL
HOSPEDEROS
TRANSMISION DE ENFERMEDADES
CUARENTENA
IDENTIFICACION
MELAMPSORA
PUCCINIA
ENFERMEDADES FUNGOSAS
AUSTRALIA
DIAGNOSTICO
ENFERMEDADES EXOTICAS
ROYA
ARBOLES FORESTALES
ARBOLES MADERABLES
ORGANISMOS PATOGENOS
CICLO VITAL
HOSPEDEROS
TRANSMISION DE ENFERMEDADES
CUARENTENA
IDENTIFICACION
MELAMPSORA
PUCCINIA
ENFERMEDADES FUNGOSAS
AUSTRALIA
spellingShingle DIAGNOSTICO
ENFERMEDADES EXOTICAS
ROYA
ARBOLES FORESTALES
ARBOLES MADERABLES
ORGANISMOS PATOGENOS
CICLO VITAL
HOSPEDEROS
TRANSMISION DE ENFERMEDADES
CUARENTENA
IDENTIFICACION
MELAMPSORA
PUCCINIA
ENFERMEDADES FUNGOSAS
AUSTRALIA
DIAGNOSTICO
ENFERMEDADES EXOTICAS
ROYA
ARBOLES FORESTALES
ARBOLES MADERABLES
ORGANISMOS PATOGENOS
CICLO VITAL
HOSPEDEROS
TRANSMISION DE ENFERMEDADES
CUARENTENA
IDENTIFICACION
MELAMPSORA
PUCCINIA
ENFERMEDADES FUNGOSAS
AUSTRALIA
130363 Walker, J.
Development of contingency plans for use against exotic pests and diseases of trees and timber, 1: Problems with the detection and identification of exotic plant pathogens of forest trees
description In Australia, native and introduced trees are at risk from many exotic diseases, both known and unknown. To exclude these diseases effectively quarantine must be based on sound biological principles. The influence on quarantine of several biological factors is discussed; those considered include life cycle of the pathogen, alternate hosts, methods of introduction, the lag period between introduction of a pathogen and its detection, deficiencies in disease records, taxonomic resources for identification and others. The close relationship between quarantine measures for agricultural, horticultural, forestry and native plants, and the need for coordination in these fields, is stressed. Case histories of the initial detection and spread of several introduced tree diseased are analysed to show difficulties which can arise in early detection of outbreaks and proposed eradication campaigns. Whilst contingency plans for disease outbreaks must be developed, it is concluded that the cheapest and most effective control measure is disease exclusion by quarantine. In Australia more stringent quarantine measures are needed to achieve this goal
format
topic_facet DIAGNOSTICO
ENFERMEDADES EXOTICAS
ROYA
ARBOLES FORESTALES
ARBOLES MADERABLES
ORGANISMOS PATOGENOS
CICLO VITAL
HOSPEDEROS
TRANSMISION DE ENFERMEDADES
CUARENTENA
IDENTIFICACION
MELAMPSORA
PUCCINIA
ENFERMEDADES FUNGOSAS
AUSTRALIA
author 130363 Walker, J.
author_facet 130363 Walker, J.
author_sort 130363 Walker, J.
title Development of contingency plans for use against exotic pests and diseases of trees and timber, 1: Problems with the detection and identification of exotic plant pathogens of forest trees
title_short Development of contingency plans for use against exotic pests and diseases of trees and timber, 1: Problems with the detection and identification of exotic plant pathogens of forest trees
title_full Development of contingency plans for use against exotic pests and diseases of trees and timber, 1: Problems with the detection and identification of exotic plant pathogens of forest trees
title_fullStr Development of contingency plans for use against exotic pests and diseases of trees and timber, 1: Problems with the detection and identification of exotic plant pathogens of forest trees
title_full_unstemmed Development of contingency plans for use against exotic pests and diseases of trees and timber, 1: Problems with the detection and identification of exotic plant pathogens of forest trees
title_sort development of contingency plans for use against exotic pests and diseases of trees and timber, 1: problems with the detection and identification of exotic plant pathogens of forest trees
publishDate 1987
work_keys_str_mv AT 130363walkerj developmentofcontingencyplansforuseagainstexoticpestsanddiseasesoftreesandtimber1problemswiththedetectionandidentificationofexoticplantpathogensofforesttrees
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