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PRESS RELEASE
Contact: Amanda Aranowski
American Phytopathological Society
Phone: +1.651.454.7250 Aquatic Plants May Hold Key to Advancing
Plant Disease Management
St. Paul, MN (July 6, 2005) - The way aquatic plants respond to plant
disease and climate change may have applications for managing land-based
agriculture, say plant pathologists with The American Phytopathological
Society (APS).
According to David Schmale III, Cornell University, Ithaca, NY, many aquatic
plants possess unique mechanisms of resistance to microbial attack. “Through
further study, plant pathologists may be able to apply the novel mechanisms
found in aquatic plants to land-based agricultural systems,” said Schmale.
Research done on the management of freshwater plant disease has created
environmentally sound methods of plant disease control. While plant
pathologists typically try to save plants from plant disease, plant
pathologists can use plant pathogens as a means to control highly invasive
freshwater plants that harm native aquatic plants.
Studies of marine plant diseases continue to provide insight as to how
climatic change influences disease development. “Emerging marine diseases,
such as coral diseases, are creating a major shift in the marine flora,”
Schmale said. “Global warming and climate change appear to be increasing the
rate at which these diseases spread and intensify,” he said.
The biology, ecology, and control of aquatic plant diseases in freshwater
and marine environments will be addressed during the Aquatic Plant Pathology
symposium at the APS Annual Meeting in Austin, TX, July 30 - August 3, 2005.
The symposium will be held Sunday, July 31 from 1-5 p.m. at the Austin
Convention Center.
Members of the media are extended complimentary registration to the annual
meeting. To register, contact Amanda Aranowski at
aaranowski@scisoc.org or
+1.651.994.3802. A news conference on emerging plant diseases will be held
at the annual meeting on Monday, August 1. Media are invited to attend or
call in by dialing 888.872.2038 and entering guest code 1202#.
The American Phytopathological Society (APS) is a non-profit, professional
scientific organization. The research of the organization’s 5,000 worldwide
members advances the understanding of the science of plant pathology and its
application to plant health.
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