Join us for the next event in: Te Whare Wānaka o Aoraki Lincoln University Excellence Series. This series has been designed to showcase leadership in various disciplines including the opportunity to promote the University’s distinctive and impactful applied research. This series celebrates research excellence and promotes a public forum to a broader community, highlighting Lincoln University’s specialist land-based contribution to driving New Zealand’s prosperity and intergenerational wellbeing.
Plant diseases result in significant crop losses in agriculture, horticulture and forestry, estimated to reduce yield by between 20-40% annually, and likely to increase under predicted climate change scenarios. Reducing the impact of these plant diseases requires an intimate understanding of the causal agent and their epidemiology. However, increasingly we are moving away from the ‘one pathogen = one disease’ model to the role of the microbial community associated with plants (the microbiome) in modulating the outcome of any pathogen challenge. This focusses on understanding the complex interaction between pathogenic microbes (the pathobiome) which influence or drive disease processes as well as their relationship with beneficial members of the microbiome reducing their impact.
Join us as Professor Eirian Jones discusses the outcomes of over 20 years of research aiming to unravel these complex interactions with respect to the epidemiology and control of soilborne and woody trunk diseases, mainly focussing on grapevine trunk diseases. She will also discuss recent work on the progress to identify and engineer microbiomes for improving plant resistance to these intractable diseases.
Please note: this event is being held in a new venue on campus - Waimarie Building






