ForPath Users:
Copied below and attached is a position announcement.
Please pass onto anyone that you believe would be interested.
I apologize for any duplicates due to cross posting on the ForEnt Listserve.
Have a good day.
Scott Enebak
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POSITION ANNOUNCEMENT
Assistant/Associate Professor - Forest Health
Auburn University's School of Forestry and Wildlife Sciences invites nominations and applications for the position of Assistant/Associate Professor in the area of Forest Health and the interactions of introduced and native fungi and insect vectors in forest ecosystems located in the southern US. This is a 12-month, tenure-track position, with 80% research and 20% teaching responsibilities. Additional information about the School of Forestry and Wildlife Sciences and its programs can be found at our website: https://sites.auburn.edu/academic/sfws/Pages/default.aspx
Women and Minorities are Encouraged to Apply
Responsibilities: The incumbent is expected to develop a significant research program through active pursuit of extramural funding, recruitment of graduate students, and publications in high-quality refereed journals. The incumbent also is expected to teach a core undergraduate course in the forestry curriculum and develop one graduate course in their area of expertise.
Qualifications: PhD in Entomology, Pathology, Forestry, Biology or a closely related field is required. We seek candidates with research/teaching interests focused on contemporary research and how forest management practices influence stand/ecosystem health. Those with a strong forest pathology and entomology background and having worked in an applied decision-making context on habitat restoration, risk mapping systems and habitat restoration are preferred. Experience in working with southern pine ecosystems is desirable. Evidence of collaboration at the international level on forest declines would be desirable for Associate level. The incumbent must present evidence of the potential for teaching excellence and a solid record of research productivity including ability to obtain extramural grants and publish findings in high-quality refereed journals. The selected candidate must be able to meet eligibility requirements for work in the United States at the time of appointment and continue working legally for the proposed term of employment. Excellent communication skills required.
Review of applications will begin April 1, 2012 and will continue until a successful candidate has been identified.
Application: To apply, submit a letter of application, curriculum vita, official transcripts, and names, e-mail addresses, and telephone numbers of three references to Mrs. Pam Beasley (beaslpa(a)auburn.edu) School of Forestry and Wildlife Sciences, 3301 Forestry and Wildlife Sciences Building, 602 Duncan Drive, Auburn University, Auburn, AL 36849-5418.
For additional information contact: Dr. Art Chappelka, Chair, Search Committee, phone 334-844-1069, fax 334-844-1084, or e-mail: chappah(a)auburn.edu
Affirmative Action/Equal Opportunity Employer
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Scott Enebak
Professor & Director
Southern Forest Nursery Management Cooperative
Forest Health Dynamics Laboratory
602 Duncan Drive
Auburn University, AL 36849
334.844.1028 Office
334.844.1084 Fax
On behalf of the organizers, Imperial College London, Forest Research UK, the Food and Environment Research Agency (FERA) and other partners,
we invite you to electronic conference:
"Pathways Into Policy: International knowledge exchange on biosecurity governance and implications for tree pest introductions and spread"
which will run until 13th March 2013.
The e-conference focuses on the knowledge gaps and research priorities and will be organized around three themes:
Theme 1: Defining key pathways and assessing their significance
Theme 2: Comparing approaches to pathway management and tree pest and disease prevention
Theme 3: Exploring underlying justifications for pathway management and tree pest and disease outbreak prevention
We invite you to submit a contribution (no more than 300 - 500 words (approximately one page)). All major contributors will appear as co-authors on the report to Living with Environmental Change program (LWEC). Informal comments are also welcome.
To subscribe to the e-conference, please go to http://pathwaysintopolicy.forumotion.co.uk.
In case of any difficulties subscribing, please contact Emily Porth, emilyfp(a)gmail.com.
This project is funded by Living with Environmental Change (LWEC) Tree Health and Biosecurity Initiative, please go to http://www.lwec.org.uk/ for further details.
We do hope you can join us.
Sincerely,
Mariella Marzano, Norman Dandy and Emily Porth - Forest Research, UK
Clive Potter and Helen Bayliss -Imperial College London
Emily Porth, Project Researcher, Social and Economic Research Group, Forest Research
Susan Frankel, USDA Forest Service, Pacific Southwest Research Station
This electronic message contains information generated by the USDA solely for the intended recipients. Any unauthorized interception of this message or the use or disclosure of the information it contains may violate the law and subject the violator to civil or criminal penalties. If you believe you have received this message in error, please notify the sender and delete the email immediately.
Dear colleagues and friends,
We would like to inform you about the upcoming “5th Phytophthora, Pythium and related genera workshop” that will take place in Beijing, China on 24-25 August 2013, immediately prior to the International Congress of Plant Pathology (ICPP; 25-30 August, 2013).
This is a two-day pre-congress workshop that will provide an additional platform to bring together scientists working on Oomycetes. The objective of the first day is to introduce the methodology for studying Oomycetes, in particular, Phytophthora and Pythium species (from isolation to characterization using morphological and molecular tools). The second day will cover contemporary research topics presented by invited and contributed speakers (see webpage for range of topics). During the evening there will be a poster session where all participants can present their work (these posters can be the same that will be presented during the ICPP)
Abstract Submission: Workshop deadline (to be considered for oral presentation) is April 1st 2013 and for the ICPP 28 February 2013.
For abstract submission, registration and detailed information on the workshop, please visit the congress website: http://www.icppbj2013.org/file/workshop/5thInternationalWorkshop.asp
If you are interested in contributing to the sessions (oral papers and posters), please inform the session organizers while submitting your abstracts online using the ICPP web page. Final selections for oral presentations will be made after registration has been completed.
Sessions for the second day are:
Session 1 Genomics and Oomycetes. Opportunities in comparative genomics.
Session 2 Taxonomy and Phylogeny of Oomycetes
Session 3: Emerging diseases, new technologies and management of Oomycete diseases in agricultural and natural settings
Session 4 Population biology, gene flow and hybridization.
The members of scientific committee are Drs. Yilmaz Balci (ybalci(a)umd.edu<mailto:ybalci@umd.edu>); David Cooke (david.cooke(a)hutton.ac.uk) Frank Martin (Frank.Martin(a)ARS.USDA.GOV) and Zhao Wenxia (zhaowenxia(a)caf.ac.cn<mailto:zhaowenxia@caf.ac.cn>) for all local arrangements.
Yilmaz Balci
Assistant Professor
University of Maryland
Department of Plant Science and Landscape Architecture
2114 Plant Sciences
College Park, MD
phone: 301 405 9744
email: ybalci(a)umd.edu
Many years ago I saw similar sphaeroblasts of ¼ to ½ inch diameter that developed within resin pockets of the bark on balsam fir in northern Minnesota with very similar appearance to the beech bumps. Some were perfectly egg-shaped and free from attachment to the xylem, others had vascular connections. All had beautifully swirled grain.
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Paul Zambino, Ph.D.
Plant Pathologist, Forest Health Protection
USDA Forest Service, Region 1
Coeur d'Alene Field Office
3815 Shreiber Way
Coeur d'Alene, Idaho 83815
Ph: (208)765-7493 FAX:(208)765-7307
Email: pzambino(a)fs.fed.us<mailto:pzambino@fs.fed.us>
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From: rg70200-forpath-bounces(a)lists.iufro.org [mailto:rg70200-forpath-bounces@lists.iufro.org] On Behalf Of d-lonsdale
Sent: Wednesday, January 30, 2013 4:51 AM
To: bonello.2(a)osu.edu; rg70200-forpath(a)lists.iufro.org
Subject: Re: [IUFRO RG 7.02 FORPATH] FW: Bumps on Beech
Dear Enrico,
I often see similar bumps on European beech and have identified them as sphaeroblasts, which are thought to develop from dormant buds. In place of a shoot, a ball of wood develops, encased in bark. A sphaeroblast can be easily detached with a mallet etc., since its woody connection to the stem is very narrow. The large sphaeroblast in the attached picture shows an arrow pointing towards the woody connection on the proximal side. Some of the bark has been pared away with a knife to expose this connection. The picture also shows wood exposed on the proximal side (with partial occlusion), perhaps because of an old injury or as a result of bark dieback. Similar canker-like areas can be seen on the bumps in John McLaughlin's photos but I doubt whether these bumps are sphaeroblasts, since their close alignment is unlikely to correspond with the positions of dormant buds.
Small bumps on American beech can also be induced by the scale insect Xylococculus betulae, which penetrates as far as the cambial zone (especially in the aftermath zones of beech bark disease [see Dave Houston's article in J. For., 73(10), 1975]. I think that they usually look rougher and corkier than the bumps in John's photos but my experience of this insect has been limited to looking at photos and to two brief visits to the USA.
Kind regards,
David
-----Original Message-----
From: rg70200-forpath-bounces(a)lists.iufro.org<mailto:rg70200-forpath-bounces@lists.iufro.org> [mailto:rg70200-forpath-bounces@lists.iufro.org]On Behalf Of Bonello, Pierluigi
Sent: 28 January 2013 18:17
To: forpath
Subject: [IUFRO RG 7.02 FORPATH] FW: Bumps on Beech
Dear colleagues,
I received these photos from one of my forest pathology students and I must admit I've never seen these things before. Can anyone help?
Thanks!
Enrico
Pierluigi (Enrico) Bonello, Professor
Dept. of Plant Pathology
The Ohio State University
Tel: (614) 688-5401
http://plantpath.osu.edu/bonello - http://esgp.osu.edu/ - http://cmib.osu.edu - http://caps.osu.edu
Would you like to support my program to foster research on woody plant health with a tax-deductible charitable donation? Click here!
From: Diana Saintignon <saintignon.1(a)buckeyemail.osu.edu<mailto:saintignon.1@buckeyemail.osu.edu>>
Date: Monday, January 28, 2013 12:41 PM
To: "Showalter, David N." <showalter.53(a)osu.edu<mailto:showalter.53@osu.edu>>, Pierluigi Bonello <bonello.2(a)osu.edu<mailto:bonello.2@osu.edu>>, Dan Herms <herms.2(a)osu.edu<mailto:herms.2@osu.edu>>
Subject: Bumps on Beech
While I was at Harvard I found this beech tree with some interesting wart-like mounds on its bark. Is this normal for some beeches, or could it potentially be a paper topic? Do you know what it is?
Thanks!
-Diana
This electronic message contains information generated by the USDA solely for the intended recipients. Any unauthorized interception of this message or the use or disclosure of the information it contains may violate the law and subject the violator to civil or criminal penalties. If you believe you have received this message in error, please notify the sender and delete the email immediately.