FABI News

FABI Events

FABI in a nutshell

Research Features

WELCOME TO THE PHOTO ALBUM OF FOREST PATHOLOGISTS (AND ENTOMOLOGISTS)

Click here to view the gallery

Link to: photo archives of the Western Forest Insect Work Conference

Welcome to this album of photographs of forest pathologists. To give you some background on its origin; the idea to establish a widely available collection of forest pathologists emerged at the time of the Forest Pathology field trip associated with the 2008 Centenary meeting of the American Phytopathological Society in Minnesota. The organisers Joe O'Brien and Linda Haugen, suggested to those attending the two-day tour that they might like to bring along photographs of colleagues at work, with the idea that these photographs might be shared at an evening slide show. The planned slide show never occurred as we had the greater pleasure of a fabulous lecture on the history of forest pathology by the Wayne Sinclair. Both Joe and I had assembled a relatively large (eclectic) collection of photographs and the core of this album includes those pictures. Additional photographs in this primary collection were provided especially by friends Thomas Kirisits (Austria) and Bernard Slippers (South Africa).

Where to from here? James Mehl of FABI has helped me to assemble the initial set of photographs using the application JAlbum. You will notice that many of the photographs lack details of the people illustrated or the date and event where the picture was taken. I hope that those paging through the photos might supply us with these details. Furthermore, we will continue to add photographs to the collection and I hope that colleagues around the world might consider contributing additional images. If you would like us to include photographs, just send them to me at the address listed at the end of this note. The best way would be to assemble your photographs in a PowerPoint presentation (other formats would be fine) and to include information relating to the photograph including the date and event where it was taken. We will then upload pictures regularly.

By the way, you will notice that many of the photographs include or feature people that might be considered "more" forest entomologists than pathologists. As most will agree, these two disciplines overlap considerably and some of us (I am one of those) consider the boundaries difficult, if not impossible to define. Ultimately, I would like this collection to cover both forest pathologists and forest entomologists equally. However, as a start, the project had its inception at a pathology event and for now the title of the album is probably most appropriate.

I would very much welcome comments and suggestions for this collection. If there are photographs that you would like to have removed - just say the word!! I have used many of the photographs in lectures and as teaching aids and I hope that you will enjoy the opportunity to share these pictures with your students and friends. Certainly for some of us, they are full happy memories. Enjoy!!

Best wishes

Mike Wingfield
Director, Forestry and Agricultural Biotechnology Institute (FABI)
University of Pretoria
Pretoria 0002
Republic of South Africa
E-mail: This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.

Photo archives of the Western Forest Insect Work Conference

New Publications

Six DL, Marincowitz S, Duong TA. (2026) Ophiostoma ipsi-confusi sp. nov. Six, Marinc. & Duong, a consistent symbiotic fungus of the pinyon ips bark beetle, Ips confusus LeConte. Symbiosis 10.1007/s13199-026-01135-9
Yan Z, Zhao Y, Meng X, Gao M, Si H, Zhao G, Bose T, Chang R. (2026) New manganese-oxidizing Acremonium-like fungi from halophytic rhizospheres in the Yellow River Delta, China. Mycologia :1-13. 10.1080/00275514.2026.2627133
Eshetu FB, Barnes I, Nahrung HF, Fitza KNE, Slippers B. (2026) A Century of invasion: How biosecurity influenced populations of Sirex noctilio and Its fungal symbiont in Australasia. Molecular Ecology 35(6):0962 - 1083. 10.1111/mec.70311
Viljoen A, Duong TA, Kanzi AM, Wingfield BD. (2026) Comparative analysis of mitochondrial genomes in the Ceratocystidaceae reveals highly conserved gene organization despite substantial genome size variation. BMC Genomics 10.1186/s12864-026-12755-2
Ribeiro MF, Cavallini G, Solce GN, Favoreto AL, De Souza Passos J-R, Barbosa LR, Hurley BP, Wilcken CF. (2026) Cold storage of Gonipterus platensis (Coleoptera: Curculionidae) eggs for Anaphes nitens (Hymenoptera: Mymaridae) rearing. PeerJ :1-14. 10.7717/peerj.20903 PDF
Pham NQ, Marincowitz S, Marpaung YMAN, Tarigan M, Wingfield BD, Wingfield MJ. (2026) Two Cryphonectriaceae species from Eucalyptus leaves in North Sumatra and their stem inoculation outcomes. Fungal Systematics and Evolution 17:69–79. 10.15761/fuse.2026.17.05 PDF
Nickles GR, Stokes CK, Narh DL, Lynn KMT, Fuqua SR, Bryan C, Allen BM, Bivins CP, Bok JW, Brewer JS, Buthelezi ST, Clark JPRM, Coon KL, Corby LR, Coetzee MPA, Dewing C, Duong TA, Harris MA, Keller NP, Kopotsa K, Lane FA, Nichols HL, Nieuwoudt A, Nuñez MA, Medina Munoz ME, Park SC, Pham NQ, Ryan KT, Solís M, Vilgalys R, Wallace JM, Wang YW, Wingfield BD, Wingfield MJ, Worley TK, Zallek TA, Zamanian M, Hoeksma JD, Drott M, Pringle A. (2026) Equipped for success: Genomes and metabolites of the European Amanita muscaria are conserved in its novel South African range. New Phytologist 10.1111/nph.71064
Pham NQ, Wingfield MJ, Duong TA, Wingfield BD. (2026) Draft genome sequence of Elsinoe masingae: the causal agent of Eucalyptus scab in South Africa. Australasian Plant Pathology 55:37. 10.1007/s13313-026-01082-5
Pham NQ, Marincowitz S, Wingfield BD, Crous PW, Santos SA, Durán A, Tarigan M, Wingfield MJ . (2026) Pseudoteratosphaeria supramediana sp. nov. (Teratosphaeriaceae, Mycosphaerellales), a new foliar pathogen on Eucalyptus in Indonesia. Australasian Plant Pathology 55:28. 10.1007/s13313-026-01092-3
Nel WJ, Jali S, Barnes I, Wondafrash M, Hurley BP. (2026) Outbreaks of a native jewel beetle, Agrilus grandis (Coleoptera: Buprestidae), on commercial black wattle, Acacia mearnsii, plantations in South Africa. African Entomology 34(1):1-5. 10.17159/2254-8854/2026/a24625