Research on such classical diseases as apple scab and grape powdery mildew has been continuous and intensive throughout the last century. However, relatively few investigations have had a major impact upon how we approach controlling those diseases. An overall goal of my research has been to identify those areas of pathogen biology, ecology, and epidemiology that are poorly understood, and which severely constrain our ability to improve disease management programs. The research frequently spans disciplinary, institutional, and international boundaries, and has involved collaborations with horticulturists, food scientists, and entomologists from the other departments at Geneva, and in countries from Norway to Australia.
David Gadoury has hosted 20 Episodes.
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Robotics Revolution: Part 2
December 14th, 2020 | 23 mins 46 secs
Phytopatholobot & scouting from space
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Robotics Revolution: Part 1
November 30th, 2020 | 36 mins 57 secs
A quiet revolution is underway in agriculture.
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Cranberries
November 16th, 2020 | 25 mins 26 secs
Where do they come from? Are they really grown in water? Which pathogens are vying to ruin your Thanksgiving dinner? What challenges do cranberry growers face and what exactly is Ocean Spray?
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Resist!
November 2nd, 2020 | 36 mins 12 secs
Microscopic battlefields, how plants resist pathogens, and how far we’ve come in understanding the strategies employed by both sides in this conflict.
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For the Greater Good...of Wine
October 19th, 2020 | 27 mins 44 secs
From education on the dangers of "suitcase" plant material, to creating islands of habitat for beneficial insects, to the collective agreement on a set of rules by which crops can be produced in a more sustainable fashion; it all works better when we look out for each other.
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A Distinct Amount of Human Suffering
October 5th, 2020 | 32 mins 41 secs
If you thought that human misery due to plant diseases was only from our distant past, that our technology has placed us beyond the reach of plague and famine, then you have not kept up to date on Phytopthora infestans.
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The Future Looks Bright
September 21st, 2020 | 31 mins 24 secs
We turn to photobiology for answers on how to produce healthier crops.
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What Can Plants Teach Us About Pandemics?
September 7th, 2020 | 38 mins 4 secs
Tracking, testing, and stopping viruses that would otherwise wreak havoc within a population is the everyday work for some plant pathologists.
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The Wonderful World of Worms
August 24th, 2020 | 21 mins 15 secs
Charles Darwin was fascinated by them. You should be too.
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The Adventures of Sooty Blotch & Flyspeck
August 10th, 2020 | 32 mins 8 secs
What's up with all those tiny spots on your apples?
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The Rodney Dangerfield of the Microbial World
July 27th, 2020 | 30 mins 51 secs
They are social and devious. They are far more complex, sophisticated, and organized than you might ever imagine.
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Seeds!
June 29th, 2020 | 31 mins 2 secs
Just about every plant we want to grow comes from a seed, but where do all of those seeds come from?
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Willie Nelson's Bag of Spinach
June 15th, 2020 | 35 mins 28 secs
Fresh produce tastes great and is part of a healthy diet, but we all have a part to play in the war against microbial hitchhikers...even Willie.
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Editing Plant Genes
June 1st, 2020 | 24 mins 11 secs
How revolutionary methods can be used to disarm some of the most destructive pathogens that imperil the world's food supply.
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Antibiotics, Soil Microbiome, and Biological Control
May 18th, 2020 | 29 mins 9 secs
Your backyard is full of antibiotics. What they're there doing might surprise you.