Abstract Increased temperatures associated with urbanization (the “urban heat island” effect) have been shown to impact a wide range of traits across diverse taxa. At the same time, climatic conditions vary at fine spatial scales within habitats due to factors including shade from shrubs, trees, and built structures. Patches of shade may function as microclimate refugia that allow species to occur in habitats where high temperatures and/or exposure to ultraviolet radiation would otherwise be prohibitive. However, the importance of shaded microhabitats for interactions between species across urbanized landscapes remains poorly understood. Weedy plants and their foliar pathogens are a tractable system for studying how multiple scales of climatic variation influence infection prevalence. Powdery mildew pathogens are particularly well suited to this work, as these fungi can be visibly diagnosed on leaf surfaces. We studied the effects of shaded microclimates on rates of powdery mildew infection onPlantagohost species in (1) “pandemic pivot” surveys in which undergraduate students recorded shade and infection status of thousands of plants along road verges in urban and suburban residential neighborhoods, (2) monthly surveys of plant populations in 22 parks along an urbanization gradient, and (3) a manipulative field experiment directly testing the effects of shade on the growth and transmission of powdery mildew. Together, our field survey results show strong positive effects of shade on mildew infection in wildPlantagopopulations across urban, suburban, and rural habitats. Our experiment suggests that this relationship is causal, where microclimate conditions associated with shade promote pathogen growth. Overall, infection prevalence increased with urbanization despite a negative association between urbanization and tree cover at the landscape scale. These findings highlight the importance of taking microclimate heterogeneity into account when establishing links between macroclimate or land use context and prevalence of disease.
more »
« less
An emerging fungal disease is spreading across the globe and affecting the blueberry industry
Summary Powdery mildew is an economically important disease caused byc. 1000 different fungal species.Erysiphe vacciniiis an emerging powdery mildew species that is impacting the blueberry industry. Once confined to North America,E. vacciniiis now spreading rapidly across major blueberry‐growing regions, including China, Morocco, Mexico, and the USA, threatening millions in losses.This study documents its recent global spread by analyzing both herbarium specimens, some over 150‐yr‐old, and fresh samples collected world‐wide.Our findings were integrated into a ‘living phylogeny’ via T‐BAS to simplify pathogen identification and enable rapid responses to new outbreaks. We identified 50 haplotypes, two primary introductions world‐wide, and revealed a shift from a generalist to a specialist pathogen.This research provides insights into the complexities of host specialization and highlights the need to address this emerging global threat to blueberry production.
more »
« less
- PAR ID:
- 10578835
- Author(s) / Creator(s):
- ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; more »
- Publisher / Repository:
- New Phytologist Foundation
- Date Published:
- Journal Name:
- New Phytologist
- Volume:
- 246
- Issue:
- 1
- ISSN:
- 0028-646X
- Page Range / eLocation ID:
- 103 to 112
- Format(s):
- Medium: X
- Sponsoring Org:
- National Science Foundation
More Like this
-
-
Abstract Spray‐induced gene silencing (SIGS) is an emerging tool for crop pest protection. It utilizes exogenously applied double‐stranded RNA to specifically reduce pest target gene expression using endogenous RNA interference machinery. In this study, SIGS methods were developed and optimized for powdery mildew fungi, which are widespread obligate biotrophic fungi that infect agricultural crops, using the known azole‐fungicide targetcytochrome P45051 (CYP51) in theGolovinomyces orontii–Arabidopsis thalianapathosystem. Additional screening resulted in the identification of conserved gene targets and processes important to powdery mildew proliferation:apoptosis‐antagonizing transcription factorin essential cellular metabolism and stress response; lipid catabolism geneslipase a,lipase 1, andacetyl‐CoA oxidasein energy production;and genes involved in manipulation of the plant host via abscisic acid metabolism (9‐cis‐epoxycarotenoid dioxygenase,xanthoxin dehydrogenase, and a putativeabscisic acid G‐protein coupled receptor) and secretion of the effector protein,effector candidate 2. Powdery mildew is the dominant disease impacting grapes and extensive powdery mildew resistance to applied fungicides has been reported. We therefore developed SIGS for theErysiphe necator–Vitis viniferasystem and tested six successful targets identified using theG. orontii–A. thalianasystem. For all targets tested, a similar reduction in powdery mildew disease was observed between systems. This indicates screening of broadly conserved targets in theG. orontii–A. thalianapathosystem identifies targets and processes for the successful control of other powdery mildew fungi. The efficacy of SIGS on powdery mildew fungi makes SIGS an exciting prospect for commercial powdery mildew control.more » « less
-
ABSTRACT Aesculusis a genus of woody plant species that contains multiple ecologically and ornamentally important species. Powdery mildew is common on this host genus and is particularly virulent on the economically significant horse chestnut,Aesculus hippocastanum. Previously, allErysiphespecies found onAesculusspp. were identified asErysiphe flexuosa. Recent genomic research has indicated that powdery mildew species frequently show a high degree of host specificity which was not captured by traditional morphological approaches. As such, we proceeded to collect and sequence multiple regions of the powdery mildew genome to determine the causal agents of disease on differentAesculusspp. The results of our multilocus phylogenetic analyses revealed the existence of a genetically distinct species, which has been found only onAesculusspp. native to North America.Erysiphe aesculi‐sylvaticaesp. nov. is proposed for this cryptic species. In the past 25 years, there have been multiple reports of anE. flexuosaepidemic onAesculus hippocastanumin Europe, whileE. aesculi‐sylvaticaehas yet to be identified outside of the United States. The discovery of this new cryptic powdery mildew species as well as analysis of additional sequences from collections ofE. flexuosafrom North America, including from the type specimen collected in 1872, are discussed in detail with an emphasis on the implications for the co‐evolution, worldwide spread, and invasion dynamics of these powdery mildews. Future research should continue to collect and sequence powdery mildews on differentAesculusspp. to better understand the diversity and spread of these economically important pathogens.more » « less
-
Botanical gardens host diverse plant assemblages that provide valuable opportunities to study fungal biodiversity and plant–fungal interactions. Powdery mildews (Erysiphaceae) are common pathogens in these settings, yet little is known about how they co‐occur with culturable fungi present on infected leaves. To document fungi recovered from infected tissue, we surveyed powdery mildew infections at the JC Raulston Arboretum, which is part of North Carolina State University. We identified the powdery mildew species present and the fungi that could be cultured from the infected phyllosphere. Eighteen powdery mildew species representing three genera were documented and confirmed through morphological and molecular methods. Using a dilution‐to‐extinction culturing approach, we recovered 147 isolates corresponding to 57 fungal species across 36 genera. Several genera includingAspergillusandCladosporiumwere repeatedly recovered from powdery mildew‐infected leaves, and six isolates represent potentially novel lineages. Several of these genera have previously been shown to possess biological control potential against powdery mildew. These findings demonstrate that botanical gardens harbor rich, underexplored fungal diversity and that powdery mildew–infected tissues provide access to a broad community of co‐occurring fungi. Our results highlight the potential of culture‐based surveys in botanical gardens to uncover novel fungal taxa and identify candidate biological control agents for powdery mildew management.more » « less
-
Abstract Host competence—the ability to acquire, harbour and transmit infections—drives pathogen spread and persistence in multi‐host communities. Evaluating species‐specific competence is critical for predicting transmission, particularly for generalist fungal pathogens likeBatrachochytrium dendrobatidis(Bd). Despite its central role in disease dynamics, we lack an epidemiologically grounded competence metric that rigorously accounts for how infection intensity affects a host's competence. This knowledge gap limits our ability to compare mechanisms across species and assess their roles in pathogen persistence. To address these challenges, we developed a novel, load‐dependent competence metric using host–pathogen Integral Projection Models (IPMs) that integrates variation in susceptibility, within‐host pathogen growth and pathogen shedding dynamics.We applied this metric to laboratory‐based challenge experiments with three common North American amphibians (Notophthalmus viridescens,Rana clamitansandRana catesbeianus) that persist endemically with Bd. Using dose–response assays and repeated pathogen shedding measurements across species, we asked: (i) is there a consistent, non‐linear relationship between infection intensity and pathogen shedding across species? and (ii) which load‐based traits best predict host competence? We quantified four of five components of host competence—susceptibility, pathogen growth, pathogen survival and load‐dependent shedding—and used these to parameterize species‐specific IPMs, integrating competence into a single relative metric across species.We found that Bd shedding increased non‐linearly with infection intensity, contradicting the standard assumption that Bd shedding is linearly related to infection intensity.Notophthalmus viridescensandR. catesbeianuswere the most competent hosts but through distinct pathways: high susceptibility inN. viridescensand elevated shedding rates inR. catesbeianus. In contrast, density‐dependent reductions in pathogen growth and shedding limitedR. clamitanscompetence. Thus, species‐level competence is not determined by a single trait, but emerges from interactions among multiple load‐based processes.Our results demonstrate that variation in competence emerges from distinct, species‐specific processes across multiple dimensions of competence. By linking individual infection dynamics to population‐level transmission potential, our integrative framework provides a more mechanistic approach to predicting host contributions to community‐level pathogen persistence. Read the freePlain Language Summaryfor this article on the Journal blog.more » « less
An official website of the United States government

