[Plsgs] Please Join Us! 2/6/24 Seminar Brooke Sykes "Spatial variation in foliar endophytes: links to sapling success in a conservation nursery?"
Shinagawa, Keenia Alejandra Ibarra - (kshinagawa)
kshinagawa at arizona.edu
Tue Feb 6 16:08:13 MST 2024
Dear all-
It looks like the old Zoom link was used for Brooke's seminar.
Please follow the link here now:
https://arizona.zoom.us/j/83044711714
(password: spls23)
Thank you and sorry for the interruption,
Keenia
Keenia Shinagawa, M. Ed. she/her
Student Support / Graduate Coordinator
School of Plant Sciences
THE UNIVERSITY OF ARIZONA
Forbes, 317
PO Box 210036 | Tucson, AZ 85721
________________________________
From: Shinagawa, Keenia Alejandra Ibarra - (kshinagawa) <kshinagawa at arizona.edu>
Sent: Monday, February 5, 2024 10:36:55 AM
To: plsgs at list.cals.arizona.edu <plsgs at list.cals.arizona.edu>; plsfaculty at list.cals.arizona.edu <plsfaculty at list.cals.arizona.edu>
Cc: Mandel, M. Alejandra - (mandel1) <Mandel at ag.arizona.edu>; Wasmann, Catherine C - (cwasmann) <cwasmann at ag.arizona.edu>; Bogner, David V - (bognerdv) <bognerdv at arizona.edu>; Vedantam, Gayatri - (gayatri) <gayatri at arizona.edu>; ken.callicott at usda.gov <ken.callicott at usda.gov>; hillary.mehl at usda.gov <hillary.mehl at usda.gov>
Subject: Please Join Us! 2/6/24 Seminar Brooke Sykes "Spatial variation in foliar endophytes: links to sapling success in a conservation nursery?"
Dear all,
Please join us for our Tuesday’s seminar tomorrow,
February 6th, 2024 from 4pm-5pm in Marley 230
for Brooke Emma Sykes’ presentation titled:
Spatial variation in foliar endophytes: links to sapling success in a conservation nursery?
Refreshments will be provided in the Marley Lobby at 3:30.
Zoom link below:
https://arizona.zoom.us/j/4959286223
Password: SPLS
Abstract below:
All plants, including those in cultivated and managed settings, host diverse fungal symbionts called endophytes in their healthy photosynthetic tissue. While plant genotype is often linked with endophytic community structure in agroecosystems, it is becoming increasingly evident that community assembly and function are context-dependent and change across species and ecological scales. We sampled Torreya taxifolia saplings at a conservation nursery in Durham, North Carolina to characterize foliar endophytic fungi for this species the first time, and link variation in endophyte communities to host genotype and to the nursery setting. We found all trees to be healthy and pathogen-free, each harboring distinct endophytic fungal communities that are structured spatially based on proximity to a forest edge. We saw class-level differences in fungal taxa between two sampling years, indicating that young saplings may be experiencing successional dynamics in their endophyte communities after 7 years in-ground. Overall, our results show that fine-scale environmental variation is a strong influence on endophyte communities, that T. taxifolia possesses a high capacity for establishing symbioses with fungi outside of its native range, and that understanding these symbioses has the potential to inform cultivation practices in host taxa that are rare or threatened.
[A poster for a plant nursery Description automatically generated]
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