Craig C. Bateman
Affiliations: | 2012-2018 | Department of Entomology and Nematology | University of Florida, Gainesville, Gainesville, FL, United States |
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"Craig Bateman"Parents
Sign in to add mentorJiri Hulcr | grad student | 2012-2018 | UF Gainesville | |
(2012-2014 M.S.; 2014-2018 Ph.D.) |
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Publications
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Li Y, Bateman C, Skelton J, et al. (2021) Pre-invasion assessment of exotic bark beetle-vectored fungi to detect tree-killing pathogens. Phytopathology |
Mayers CG, Harrington TC, Mcnew DL, et al. (2020) Four mycangium types and four genera of ambrosia fungi suggest a complex history of fungus farming in the ambrosia beetle tribe Xyloterini. Mycologia. 1-34 |
Skelton J, Johnson AJ, Jusino MA, et al. (2019) A selective fungal transport organ (mycangium) maintains coarse phylogenetic congruence between fungus-farming ambrosia beetles and their symbionts. Proceedings. Biological Sciences. 286: 20182127 |
Mayers CG, Bateman CC, Harrington TC. (2018) New Meredithiella species from mycangia of Corthylus ambrosia beetles suggest genus-level coadaptation but not species-level coevolution. Mycologia. 110: 63-78 |
Skelton J, Jusino MA, Li Y, et al. (2018) Detecting Symbioses in Complex Communities: the Fungal Symbionts of Bark and Ambrosia Beetles Within Asian Pines. Microbial Ecology |
Short DPG, O'Donnell K, Stajich JE, et al. (2017) PCR Multiplexes Discriminate Fusarium Symbionts of Invasive Euwallacea Ambrosia Beetles that Inflict Damage on Numerous Tree Species Throughout the United States. Plant Disease. 101: 233-240 |
Li Y, Bateman CC, Skelton J, et al. (2017) Wood decay fungus Flavodon ambrosius (Basidiomycota: Polyporales) is widely farmed by two genera of ambrosia beetles. Fungal Biology. 121: 984-989 |
Bateman C, Huang Y, Simmons DR, et al. (2017) Ambrosia beetle Premnobius cavipennis (Scolytinae: Ipini) carries highly divergent ascomycotan ambrosia fungus, Afroraffaelea ambrosiae gen. nov. et sp. nov. (Ophiostomatales) Fungal Ecology. 25: 41-49 |
Simmons DR, de Beer ZW, Huang YT, et al. (2016) New Raffaelea species (Ophiostomatales) from the USA and Taiwan associated with ambrosia beetles and plant hosts. Ima Fungus. 7: 265-273 |
Bateman C, Šigut M, Skelton J, et al. (2016) Fungal Associates of the Xylosandrus compactus (Coleoptera: Curculionidae, Scolytinae) Are Spatially Segregated on the Insect Body. Environmental Entomology |