FABI News

FABI Events

FABI in a nutshell

Research Features

FABI enjoys the strength of various research initiatives relating to forestry and forest health. These include the Tree Protection Co-operative Programme (TPCP) established in 1990, as a co-operative programme supporting commercial forestry companies in South Africa, the Forest Molecular Biology Programme and the DST/ NRF Centre of Excellence in Tree Health Biotechnology (CTHB). Through these and other programmes, the Institute based at the University of Pretoria (http://www.up.ac.za/) hosts students and researchers from many parts of the world, with some 30 languages spoken by members of the FABI team. FABI researchers have had close linkages with Chinese, since the establishment of the Institute and these are clearly destined to expand in the future. A step in this direction has been the recent establishment of the CFEPP, a new research initiative focussed on studying Eucalyptus pests and diseases, linking FABI and the China Eucalypt Research Centre (CERC).

New Publications

Motete T, Solis M, Hammerbacher A, Naidoo S. (2026) Gene Expression Profiling in Eucalyptus Associates Phenylpropanoid Resistance to Teratosphaeria destructans. Plant Pathology 10.1111/ppa.70207
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