Their study examines the molecular biochemistry of conifers interacting with genomes of bark beetles and bark beetle-associated
fungal pathogens. Bohlmann's study appears in today's edition of the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. "Figuring out how these naturally occurring defenses work has important implications for the long-term sustainability and health of our forests," says Bohlmann, who's working with the B.C. Ministry of Forests and Range, the forestry industry and the Canadian Forest Service. Insect pests and pathogens cause annual losses of billions of dollars to conifer-based forest economies in North America and Europe. In B.C., the mountain pine beetle epidemic has killed about 40 per cent of the pine forests since its first appearance in the mid 1990s. This is the largest recorded bark beetle outbreak in Canada, leaving B.C. with 13 million hectares of grey and red dead pine -- an area four times the size of Vancouver Island and a volume of dead timber equivalent to 530 million telephone poles. Bohlmann is leading UBC's and international research programs on forest health genomics. In 2006, Bohlmann and a team of international scientists completed the world's first physical map and sequencing of a tree genome -- the third plant ever sequenced. Sciendaily News.
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