id ftands:oai:ands.org.au::699745
record_format openpolar
institution Open Polar
collection Research Data Australia (Australian National Data Service - ANDS)
op_collection_id ftands
language unknown
topic biota
ALPINE/TUNDRA
EARTH SCIENCE
BIOSPHERE
TERRESTRIAL ECOSYSTEMS
VEGETATION SPECIES
VEGETATION
MICROALGAE
BIOLOGICAL CLASSIFICATION
PLANTS
MOSSES/HORNWORTS/LIVERWORTS
LICHENS
FUNGI
VIRUSES
BRYOPHYTE
DATE
GENBANK
HEARD ISLAND
INTERNAL TRANSCRIBED SPACERS
ITS
LATITUDE
LONGITUDE
SPECIES
VISUAL OBSERVATIONS
FIELD SURVEYS
FIELD INVESTIGATION
OCEAN &gt
SOUTHERN OCEAN
SOUTHERN OCEAN &gt
MACQUARIE ISLAND
CONTINENT &gt
ANTARCTICA &gt
Casey
Davis
Mawson
GEOGRAPHIC REGION &gt
POLAR
HEARD AND MCDONALD ISLANDS
spellingShingle biota
ALPINE/TUNDRA
EARTH SCIENCE
BIOSPHERE
TERRESTRIAL ECOSYSTEMS
VEGETATION SPECIES
VEGETATION
MICROALGAE
BIOLOGICAL CLASSIFICATION
PLANTS
MOSSES/HORNWORTS/LIVERWORTS
LICHENS
FUNGI
VIRUSES
BRYOPHYTE
DATE
GENBANK
HEARD ISLAND
INTERNAL TRANSCRIBED SPACERS
ITS
LATITUDE
LONGITUDE
SPECIES
VISUAL OBSERVATIONS
FIELD SURVEYS
FIELD INVESTIGATION
OCEAN &gt
SOUTHERN OCEAN
SOUTHERN OCEAN &gt
MACQUARIE ISLAND
CONTINENT &gt
ANTARCTICA &gt
Casey
Davis
Mawson
GEOGRAPHIC REGION &gt
POLAR
HEARD AND MCDONALD ISLANDS
Investigation of virus biodiversity in Antarctic terrestrial plants
topic_facet biota
ALPINE/TUNDRA
EARTH SCIENCE
BIOSPHERE
TERRESTRIAL ECOSYSTEMS
VEGETATION SPECIES
VEGETATION
MICROALGAE
BIOLOGICAL CLASSIFICATION
PLANTS
MOSSES/HORNWORTS/LIVERWORTS
LICHENS
FUNGI
VIRUSES
BRYOPHYTE
DATE
GENBANK
HEARD ISLAND
INTERNAL TRANSCRIBED SPACERS
ITS
LATITUDE
LONGITUDE
SPECIES
VISUAL OBSERVATIONS
FIELD SURVEYS
FIELD INVESTIGATION
OCEAN &gt
SOUTHERN OCEAN
SOUTHERN OCEAN &gt
MACQUARIE ISLAND
CONTINENT &gt
ANTARCTICA &gt
Casey
Davis
Mawson
GEOGRAPHIC REGION &gt
POLAR
HEARD AND MCDONALD ISLANDS
description Samples from Macquarie Island were collected between 1998 and 2004. Samples from Heard Island were collected during 2000. Continental samples were collected between 2004 and 2006. This project aims to confirm that viruses are the cause of disease symptoms observed in several plant species from Macquarie Island, and to characterise the viruses. These would be the first examples of terrestrial plant viruses found in Antarctica, and the southernmost plant viruses found. The results would be of fundamental biological significance, and will enable investigation of how plant viruses evolve in such an isolated location. The possibility of terrestrial plant viruses on Heard Island will also be investigated. A species from this project that has been entered into the Genbank database, a partial sequence of Stilbocarpa virus from Macquarie island - AF478691 (Genbank number). See also ASAC project 2152 (ASAC_2152). The fields in this dataset are: Species Date Latitude Longitude Collection Site Genbank Number Collection Number Internal Transcribed Spacers Comments Project objectives: The project objectives, as stated in the project application round 2008/09, appear below: This project has already enabled identification and characterisation of a new virus in Stilbocarpa polaris on Macquarie Island. This is the first example of a terrestrial plant virus found in Antarctica, and is of of fundamental biological significance. It is the southernmost plant virus known, and occurs on one of the most isolated and geologically recent islands. We have determined the complete genomic sequence of this virus, and have started to analyse the dispersal and origins of this virus. The main objectives of the next phase of this project are: 1. to further investigate the genetic variability, origins and evolution of the Stilbocarpa virus SMBV, and compare it with other badnaviruses to assess whether it has an extra gene compared with other viruses in the group 2. to analyse its means of transmission between Stilbocarpa plants and its dispersal around the island, and the extent of its effect on the host plants (such as significantly reduced seed set). 3. to analyse the effect of climate change, already happening on Macquarie Island, on SMBV and its host plants. 4. to analyse disease symptoms observed in several other subantarctic plant species, especially Cardamine corymbosa, to test whether these species are also virus-infected. Totally different virus-like particles have also been observed by electron microscopy in one sample of diseased leaves of Stilbocarpa polaris from Macquarie Island. These will be further characterised. 5. to investigate the biodiversity and dispersal of other plant pathogens such as fungi, and their consequences on plant health. A fungal pathogen of the moss Bryum argenteum from continental Antarctica has been identified, and two others will be characterised from mosses on Heard and Macquarie Islands. The further extension of this project will make use of specimens already collected on Heard and Macquarie Islands, to obtain as much information as possible about plant diseases in these remote locations, and their environmental adaptation to climate change. Taken from the 2008-2009 Progress Report: Progress against objectives: Good progress has been made with this project, in objectives where rabbit damage on Macquarie Island has not prevented progress. Analysis of DNA sequencing results for variants of the Stilbocarpa mosaic bacilliform virus has continued this year. Two papers are nearing completion on these results. It has proven difficult to analyse the means of transmission of the virus in Stilbocarpa at present, mainly due to rabbits completely eating plants at sites which were being monitored. However, this season we were able to sample some very young Stilbocarpa seedlings under plants difficult for rabbits to access, and this gives the possibility of testing for seed transmission of the virus. The potential new plant virus previously observed in Cardamine could not be followed up, as the area has been completely denuded of Cardamine plants by rabbits. An exclosure has been erected to attempt to germinate potentially infected seedlings in the area where diseased plants had been observed. Fungal infection of mosses colonising dead Poa foliosa tussocks was observed on Macquarie Island this year, and these colonies will be further examined. The results and publications are in line with the objectives of the project. Taken from the 2009-2010 Progress Report: Progress against objectives: Good progress has been made with this project, in objectives where rabbit damage on Macquarie Island has not prevented progress. Analysis of DNA sequencing results for variants of the Stilbocarpa mosaic bacilliform virus has continued this year. Two papers are nearing completion on these results. It has proven difficult to analyse the means of transmission of the virus in Stilbocarpa at present, mainly due to rabbits completely eating plants at sites which were being monitored. The potential new plant virus previously observed in Cardamine could not be followed up, as the area has been completely denuded of Cardamine plants by rabbits. An exclosure had been erected to attempt to germinate potentially infected seedlings in the area where diseased plants had been observed, but was removed this year as it had unfortunately been erected some 100m from the required site,and no infected Cardamine was growing inside the fencing. However, extensive searching in nearby locations this season has possibly revealed a new site for this potential virus, and samples will be analysed on their return to Australia in April. Fungal infection of mosses colonising dead Poa foliosa tussocks was again observed on Macquarie Island this year, and these colonies will be further examined. The results and publications are in line with the objectives of the project.
author2 SKOTNICKI, MARY (hasPrincipalInvestigator)
SKOTNICKI, MARY (processor)
Australian Antarctic Data Centre (publisher)
format Dataset
title Investigation of virus biodiversity in Antarctic terrestrial plants
title_short Investigation of virus biodiversity in Antarctic terrestrial plants
title_full Investigation of virus biodiversity in Antarctic terrestrial plants
title_fullStr Investigation of virus biodiversity in Antarctic terrestrial plants
title_full_unstemmed Investigation of virus biodiversity in Antarctic terrestrial plants
title_sort investigation of virus biodiversity in antarctic terrestrial plants
publisher Australian Antarctic Data Centre
url https://researchdata.edu.au/investigation-virus-biodiversity-terrestrial-plants/699745
https://data.aad.gov.au/metadata/records/ASAC_2153
http://nla.gov.au/nla.party-617536
op_coverage Spatial: northlimit=-54.6; southlimit=-54.7; westlimit=158.8; eastLimit=158.9; projection=WGS84
Spatial: northlimit=-52.6; southlimit=-53.1; westlimit=73.1; eastLimit=73.4; projection=WGS84
Spatial: northlimit=-66.27; southlimit=-66.29; westlimit=110.48; eastLimit=110.55; projection=WGS84
Spatial: northlimit=-67.55; southlimit=-67.65; westlimit=62.84; eastLimit=62.9; projection=WGS84
Spatial: northlimit=-68.54; southlimit=-68.61; westlimit=77.91; eastLimit=77.99; projection=WGS84
Temporal: From 1998-11-01 to 1999-12-31
long_lat ENVELOPE(73.510,73.510,-53.117,-53.117)
ENVELOPE(73.510,73.510,-53.117,-53.117)
ENVELOPE(72.600,72.600,-53.033,-53.033)
ENVELOPE(158.8,158.9,-54.6,-54.7)
ENVELOPE(73.1,73.4,-52.6,-53.1)
ENVELOPE(110.48,110.55,-66.27,-66.29)
ENVELOPE(62.84,62.9,-67.55,-67.65)
ENVELOPE(77.91,77.99,-68.54,-68.61)
geographic Antarctic
Southern Ocean
Heard Island
Heard Island
Heard
McDonald Islands
geographic_facet Antarctic
Southern Ocean
Heard Island
Heard Island
Heard
McDonald Islands
genre Antarc*
Antarctic
Antarctica
Heard Island
Macquarie Island
McDonald Islands
Southern Ocean
Tundra
genre_facet Antarc*
Antarctic
Antarctica
Heard Island
Macquarie Island
McDonald Islands
Southern Ocean
Tundra
op_source Australian Antarctic Data Centre
op_relation https://researchdata.edu.au/investigation-virus-biodiversity-terrestrial-plants/699745
4dd3183d-d9a5-4714-88e4-2caa7a69cb59
ASAC_2153
https://data.aad.gov.au/metadata/records/ASAC_2153
http://nla.gov.au/nla.party-617536
_version_ 1766146841053757440
spelling ftands:oai:ands.org.au::699745 2023-05-15T13:41:12+02:00 Investigation of virus biodiversity in Antarctic terrestrial plants SKOTNICKI, MARY (hasPrincipalInvestigator) SKOTNICKI, MARY (processor) Australian Antarctic Data Centre (publisher) Spatial: northlimit=-54.6; southlimit=-54.7; westlimit=158.8; eastLimit=158.9; projection=WGS84 Spatial: northlimit=-52.6; southlimit=-53.1; westlimit=73.1; eastLimit=73.4; projection=WGS84 Spatial: northlimit=-66.27; southlimit=-66.29; westlimit=110.48; eastLimit=110.55; projection=WGS84 Spatial: northlimit=-67.55; southlimit=-67.65; westlimit=62.84; eastLimit=62.9; projection=WGS84 Spatial: northlimit=-68.54; southlimit=-68.61; westlimit=77.91; eastLimit=77.99; projection=WGS84 Temporal: From 1998-11-01 to 1999-12-31 https://researchdata.edu.au/investigation-virus-biodiversity-terrestrial-plants/699745 https://data.aad.gov.au/metadata/records/ASAC_2153 http://nla.gov.au/nla.party-617536 unknown Australian Antarctic Data Centre https://researchdata.edu.au/investigation-virus-biodiversity-terrestrial-plants/699745 4dd3183d-d9a5-4714-88e4-2caa7a69cb59 ASAC_2153 https://data.aad.gov.au/metadata/records/ASAC_2153 http://nla.gov.au/nla.party-617536 Australian Antarctic Data Centre biota ALPINE/TUNDRA EARTH SCIENCE BIOSPHERE TERRESTRIAL ECOSYSTEMS VEGETATION SPECIES VEGETATION MICROALGAE BIOLOGICAL CLASSIFICATION PLANTS MOSSES/HORNWORTS/LIVERWORTS LICHENS FUNGI VIRUSES BRYOPHYTE DATE GENBANK HEARD ISLAND INTERNAL TRANSCRIBED SPACERS ITS LATITUDE LONGITUDE SPECIES VISUAL OBSERVATIONS FIELD SURVEYS FIELD INVESTIGATION OCEAN &gt SOUTHERN OCEAN SOUTHERN OCEAN &gt MACQUARIE ISLAND CONTINENT &gt ANTARCTICA &gt Casey Davis Mawson GEOGRAPHIC REGION &gt POLAR HEARD AND MCDONALD ISLANDS dataset ftands 2021-12-06T23:22:32Z Samples from Macquarie Island were collected between 1998 and 2004. Samples from Heard Island were collected during 2000. Continental samples were collected between 2004 and 2006. This project aims to confirm that viruses are the cause of disease symptoms observed in several plant species from Macquarie Island, and to characterise the viruses. These would be the first examples of terrestrial plant viruses found in Antarctica, and the southernmost plant viruses found. The results would be of fundamental biological significance, and will enable investigation of how plant viruses evolve in such an isolated location. The possibility of terrestrial plant viruses on Heard Island will also be investigated. A species from this project that has been entered into the Genbank database, a partial sequence of Stilbocarpa virus from Macquarie island - AF478691 (Genbank number). See also ASAC project 2152 (ASAC_2152). The fields in this dataset are: Species Date Latitude Longitude Collection Site Genbank Number Collection Number Internal Transcribed Spacers Comments Project objectives: The project objectives, as stated in the project application round 2008/09, appear below: This project has already enabled identification and characterisation of a new virus in Stilbocarpa polaris on Macquarie Island. This is the first example of a terrestrial plant virus found in Antarctica, and is of of fundamental biological significance. It is the southernmost plant virus known, and occurs on one of the most isolated and geologically recent islands. We have determined the complete genomic sequence of this virus, and have started to analyse the dispersal and origins of this virus. The main objectives of the next phase of this project are: 1. to further investigate the genetic variability, origins and evolution of the Stilbocarpa virus SMBV, and compare it with other badnaviruses to assess whether it has an extra gene compared with other viruses in the group 2. to analyse its means of transmission between Stilbocarpa plants and its dispersal around the island, and the extent of its effect on the host plants (such as significantly reduced seed set). 3. to analyse the effect of climate change, already happening on Macquarie Island, on SMBV and its host plants. 4. to analyse disease symptoms observed in several other subantarctic plant species, especially Cardamine corymbosa, to test whether these species are also virus-infected. Totally different virus-like particles have also been observed by electron microscopy in one sample of diseased leaves of Stilbocarpa polaris from Macquarie Island. These will be further characterised. 5. to investigate the biodiversity and dispersal of other plant pathogens such as fungi, and their consequences on plant health. A fungal pathogen of the moss Bryum argenteum from continental Antarctica has been identified, and two others will be characterised from mosses on Heard and Macquarie Islands. The further extension of this project will make use of specimens already collected on Heard and Macquarie Islands, to obtain as much information as possible about plant diseases in these remote locations, and their environmental adaptation to climate change. Taken from the 2008-2009 Progress Report: Progress against objectives: Good progress has been made with this project, in objectives where rabbit damage on Macquarie Island has not prevented progress. Analysis of DNA sequencing results for variants of the Stilbocarpa mosaic bacilliform virus has continued this year. Two papers are nearing completion on these results. It has proven difficult to analyse the means of transmission of the virus in Stilbocarpa at present, mainly due to rabbits completely eating plants at sites which were being monitored. However, this season we were able to sample some very young Stilbocarpa seedlings under plants difficult for rabbits to access, and this gives the possibility of testing for seed transmission of the virus. The potential new plant virus previously observed in Cardamine could not be followed up, as the area has been completely denuded of Cardamine plants by rabbits. An exclosure has been erected to attempt to germinate potentially infected seedlings in the area where diseased plants had been observed. Fungal infection of mosses colonising dead Poa foliosa tussocks was observed on Macquarie Island this year, and these colonies will be further examined. The results and publications are in line with the objectives of the project. Taken from the 2009-2010 Progress Report: Progress against objectives: Good progress has been made with this project, in objectives where rabbit damage on Macquarie Island has not prevented progress. Analysis of DNA sequencing results for variants of the Stilbocarpa mosaic bacilliform virus has continued this year. Two papers are nearing completion on these results. It has proven difficult to analyse the means of transmission of the virus in Stilbocarpa at present, mainly due to rabbits completely eating plants at sites which were being monitored. The potential new plant virus previously observed in Cardamine could not be followed up, as the area has been completely denuded of Cardamine plants by rabbits. An exclosure had been erected to attempt to germinate potentially infected seedlings in the area where diseased plants had been observed, but was removed this year as it had unfortunately been erected some 100m from the required site,and no infected Cardamine was growing inside the fencing. However, extensive searching in nearby locations this season has possibly revealed a new site for this potential virus, and samples will be analysed on their return to Australia in April. Fungal infection of mosses colonising dead Poa foliosa tussocks was again observed on Macquarie Island this year, and these colonies will be further examined. The results and publications are in line with the objectives of the project. Dataset Antarc* Antarctic Antarctica Heard Island Macquarie Island McDonald Islands Southern Ocean Tundra Research Data Australia (Australian National Data Service - ANDS) Antarctic Southern Ocean Heard Island Heard Island ENVELOPE(73.510,73.510,-53.117,-53.117) Heard ENVELOPE(73.510,73.510,-53.117,-53.117) McDonald Islands ENVELOPE(72.600,72.600,-53.033,-53.033) ENVELOPE(158.8,158.9,-54.6,-54.7) ENVELOPE(73.1,73.4,-52.6,-53.1) ENVELOPE(110.48,110.55,-66.27,-66.29) ENVELOPE(62.84,62.9,-67.55,-67.65) ENVELOPE(77.91,77.99,-68.54,-68.61)