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Tyler J. Dreaden

Researcher at United States Forest Service

Publications -  14
Citations -  304

Tyler J. Dreaden is an academic researcher from United States Forest Service. The author has contributed to research in topics: Laurel wilt & Xyleborus glabratus. The author has an hindex of 8, co-authored 14 publications receiving 229 citations. Previous affiliations of Tyler J. Dreaden include United States Department of Agriculture.

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Journal Article

Effect of Propiconazole on Laurel Wilt Disease Development in Redbay Trees and on the Pathogen In Vitro

TL;DR: Results suggest that propiconazole may be useful in preventing laurel wilt in redbay, but limitations and questions regarding duration of efficacy, rate of uptake, and efficacy under different levels of disease pressure remain.
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Laurel Wilt in Natural and Agricultural Ecosystems: Understanding the Drivers and Scales of Complex Pathosystems

TL;DR: The rapid spread of laurel wilt in the United States is due to an efficient vector, X. glabratus, and the movement of wood infested with the insect and pathogen, which severely constrain the disease’s management in forest ecosystems and avocado production areas.
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Genetic Analyses of the Laurel Wilt Pathogen, Raffaelea lauricola, in Asia Provide Clues on the Source of the Clone that is Responsible for the Current USA Epidemic

TL;DR: The present results suggest that a Taiwanese origin is possible for the population of R. lauricola in the USA and that only the population from Taiwan had the genetic structure of a sexually reproducing population.
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Pyroaerobiology: the aerosolization and transport of viable microbial life by wildland fire

TL;DR: The potential for smoke to aerosolize and transport viable microbes is a virtually blank piece of the microbial biogeography puzzle with farreaching implications for ecosystem restoration/conservation, global biodiversity, meteorology, and human health.
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Recovery Plan for Laurel Wilt of Avocado, Caused by Raffaelea lauricola

TL;DR: This research surveyed birds of Altai Region, Northern Xinjiang during June-July of 1991 and recorded 120 species; among them 40 were new records of the region and Eurasian Honey Buzzard and Black-winged Pratincole were new recordings of China.