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Research Features

Management of tree pests and pathogens is most successful and durable where an integrated management system is used. Such a system should be based on selection and breeding for disease and pest tolerant material and sound forestry practices (silviculture) to ensure stress-free plants, nursery and plantation hygiene. Based on this foundation, strategies such as biological and chemical control can then be used.

Tree health management can be treated in three main categories: PREVENTION, ERADICATION and MANAGEMENT. Prevention of disease and pest outbreaks includes sound quarantine to prevent the introduction of foreign pests and pathogens into a region, as well as the planting of disease/pest tolerant genotypes. Eradication is reliant on the early detection and report of new tree health problems, followed by the destruction of infected material before the pest/pathogen can spread to other areas. Eradication is, however, strongly reliant on effective monitoring and reporting systems to ensure rapid detection of new incursions. Management includes practices such as chemical and biological control, nursery and plantation hygiene, breeding and selection of resistant genotypes, effective silviculture to reduce inoculum/ insect population build-up as well as research focused on appropriate diagnoses and biology.

Forestry is a long term business and it is important to recognise that "quick fix" solutions to disease and pest problems are ineffectual and seldom realistic. Development of biological control agents, for example, may take up to ten years, depending on the available knowledge of the target pest.

New Publications

Townsend G, Hill M, Hurley BP, Roets F. (2026) Native Scolytinae and Platypodinae beetle assemblages in indigenous South African forests and their co-occurrence with the invasive PSHB beetle. Journal of Insect Conservation 30 10.1007/s10841-026-00779-8
Botha I, Maduna SN, Hagen SB, Lall N, Berger DK. (2026) 3RAD-guided SNP discovery for species identification and conservation of the medicinal southern African tree Genus Greyia Hook. & Harv.. Ecology and Evolution 16(5):e73412, 1-29. 10.1002/ece3.73412
Balocchi F, Duncan G, Yilmaz N, Wingfield MJ, Paap T. (2026) The critically endangered geophyte Gladiolus aureus threatened by a wilt disease associated with Fusarium libertatis. Journal of Plant Pathology 10.1007/s42161-026-02227-7 PDF
Bose T, Wingfield MJ. (2026) Plantations are invasive pathogen bridgeheads—response to Li et al.. Trends in Ecology & Evolution 10.1016/j.tree.2026.05.006
Jamieson B-A, Paap T, Pegg GS, Carnegie AJ, Wingfield MJ, Roux J, Hardy GEStJ, Drenth A, Hammerbacher A, Bose T. (2026) Quambalaria spp.: Emerging Tree Pathogens of Concern. Current Forestry Reports 12:13. 10.1007/s40725-026-00274-y