Figure - uploaded by Keumchul Shin
Content may be subject to copyright.
Figure S1. Weir's cushion rust signs and symptoms on Colorado blue spruce needles in May 2018 (A), a magnified erumpent teliospore mass on a discolored region of a needle (B), and light micrographs of teliospores using squash mounts of teliospore mass (C and D). 152x155mm (300 x 300 DPI)

Figure S1. Weir's cushion rust signs and symptoms on Colorado blue spruce needles in May 2018 (A), a magnified erumpent teliospore mass on a discolored region of a needle (B), and light micrographs of teliospores using squash mounts of teliospore mass (C and D). 152x155mm (300 x 300 DPI)

Source publication
Article
Full-text available
Weir’s cushion rust caused by Chrysomyxa weirii, an autoecious microcyclic rust fungus, is known to affect trees in the genus Picea in North America and south-central Asia (Crane et al. 2000). This species, although placed in Chrysomyxa, belongs phylogenetically to Melampsora (Feau et al. 2011). Trees affected by this disease initially exhibit non-...

Similar publications

Preprint
Full-text available
The SARS-CoV-2 ARTIC amplicon protocol is the most widely used genome sequencing method for SARS-CoV-2, accounting for over 43% of publicly-available genome sequences. The protocol utilises 98 primers to amplify ∼400bp fragments of the SARS-CoV-2 genome covering all 30,000 bases. Understanding the analytical performance metrics of this protocol wil...