Phytophthora lateralis Tucker and Milbrath, causal agent of a serious fungus root rot of Chamaecyparis lawsoniana, has seriously damaged natural stands in southwestern Oregon forests and affected ornamentals throughout the Pacific Northwest. Progress with an effective control program in the field has been limited by lack of critical knowledge of...
Chamaecyparis lawsoniana, an extremely valuable timber tree
species, is highly susceptible to a serious, soil -borne root disease
caused by Phytophthora lateralis. Disease outbreaks of epidemic
proportions are continually causing high mortality in natural stands
of the host tree. Practical control measures rely on an understanding
of the many factors...
Breeding Port-Orford-cedar for resistance to Phytophthora lateralis, a causal agent of root disease, begins by screening, through artificial inoculation, phenotypically resistant trees selected from natural stands. The successful program selected tolerant or resistant POC parent trees for the purpose of disease management. Candidate resistant POCs were used in my dissertation...
Port-Orford-cedar (Chamaecyparis lawsoniana) is a forest tree native to
a small area of Oregon and California. A root disease caused by
Phytophthora lateralis causes widespread mortality of Port-Orford-cedar.
This dissertation examines three important elements of the Port-Orford-cedar
P. lateralis pathosystem related to breeding for disease resistance:
use of resistant rootstocks...