Annija Auniņa’s research while affiliated with Latvian State Forest Research Institute "Silava" and other places

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Publications (2)


A new hope: Condition of young stands suggests natural recovery of European ash in Northern Europe
  • Article

May 2025

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21 Reads

Forest Ecology and Management

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Principal coordinate analysis (PCoA) plot with Shannon diversity for fungal communities. Sample (a) and fungal taxa (b) ordination are shown. Sampling height subgroups (RC—root collar and BH—1.3 m height) are indicated by color. Ellipses indicate 95% confidence intervals for those sample groups. First three letters for genera used as an abbreviation; full names of genera mapped are these: Fus—Fusarium; Neo—Neobulgaria; Tri—Trichoderma; Api—Apiospora; Asc—Ascocoryne; Aur—Aureobasidium; Epi—Epicoccum; Muc—Mucor; Cla—Cladosporium; Par—Paraconiothyrium; Pen—Penicillium; Per—Perconia; Phy—Physalospora; Cho—Chondrostereum; Alt—Alternaria.
Dominant fungal genera isolated from 15-to 16-year-old hybrid aspen wood.
Strength (χ 2 values) and significance (p-value) of the fixed effects of sampling height, presence of frost cracks, clone and tree dimensions) on the richness of fungal taxa inhabiting the wood of 15-to 16-year-old hybrid aspen in Latvia. For the random effects, variances are shown. Significance codes, p-values: *-<0.05; **-<0.001.
Strength (χ 2 values) and significance (p-value) of the fixed effects of sampling height, presence of frost cracks, clone and tree dimensions) on the presence/absence of dominant wood-inhabiting fungal genera (Alternaria, Fusarium, Cladosporium, Trichoderma, and Penicillium) of 15-to 16-year-old hybrid aspen in Latvia. For the random effects, variances are shown. Significance codes, p-values: *-<0.05; **-<0.001.
PERMANOVA summary for a model of the dominant fungal community (presence/absence data) according to sampling height, hybrid aspen clone, and experimental trial. Significance codes, p-values: *-<0.01; **-<0.001.
Frost Cracks Show a Slight Effect on Fungal Richness in Stem Wood of Hybrid Aspen Trees in Latvia
  • Article
  • Full-text available

December 2023

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88 Reads

Hybrid aspen Populus tremula L. × Populus tremuloides Michx. is fast-growing and a potential source of biomass for bioenergy production in Europe. However, knowledge about the phytopathological risks to hybrid aspen clones, particularly about frost crack damage as a possible infection gateway of fungal infections, is scarce. Five clones, represented by 205 trees from three trials in Latvia, were studied; two wood samples (at root collar and 1.3 m height) were obtained from each tree. Wood-inhabiting fungi were isolated and identified by the morphology and sequencing of the ITS region with fungal-specific primers, and fungal communities were compared using PERMANOVA. Fungal communities from trees with stem cracks were richer in species, especially pathogens, and species richness was higher in samples collected at 1.3 m height. Plant pathogens were isolated from 52% of all samples. Soft rot-causing Alternaria and Fusarium were dominant; Alternaria was more common at the height of 1.3 m, while Fusarium was more common at the root collar. White rot fungi were isolated from less than 2% of all samples, indicating a low degree of tree infection in the 15- to 16-year-old plantations. Clonal differences were not significant for fungal communities in general; nevertheless, for the occurrence of the genus Cladosporium, clonal differences were observed. In conclusion, the differences in fungal communities in relation to stem cracks implied only indirect clonal effects on phytopathological risks, emphasizing the resistance to stem cracking as a crucial trait for the sustainability of hybrid aspen plantations.

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