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1.
Phytopathology ; 2024 May 09.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38723169

ABSTRACT

This scientometric study reviews the scientific literature and CABI distribution records published in 2022 to find evidence of major disease outbreaks and first reports of pathogens in new locations or on new hosts. This is the second time we have done this, and this study builds on our work documenting and analysing reports from 2021. Pathogens with three or more articles identified in 2022 literature were: Xylella fastidiosa, Bursaphelenchus xylophilus, Meloidogyne species complexes, Candidatus Liberibacter asiaticus, Raffaelea lauricola, Fusarium oxysporum formae specialis and Puccinia graminis f. sp. tritici. Our review of CABI distribution records found 29 pathogens with confirmed first reports in 2022. Pathogens with four or more first reports were: Meloidogyne species complexes, Pantoea ananatis, grapevine red globe virus and Thekopsora minima. Analysis of the proportion of new distribution records from 2022 indicated that grapevine red globe virus, sweet potato chlorotic stunt virus and Ca. Phytoplasma vitis may have been actively spreading. As we saw last year, there was little overlap between the pathogens identified by reviewing scientific literature versus distribution records. Strikingly, too, there was also no overlap between species assessed to be actively spreading in this year's study and those identified last year. In general, introduction of new pathogens and outbreaks of extant pathogens threaten food security and ecosystem services. Continued monitoring of these threats is essential to support phytosanitary measures intended to prevent pathogen introductions and management of threats within a country.

2.
Phytopathology ; 113(9): 1620-1621, 2023 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37924846

ABSTRACT

Plant viruses are an ever-present threat to agricultural production and provide a wide array of symptoms resulting in economic losses throughout the world. Diseases can be transmitted by insect vectors, as well as through pollen, seed, and other means. With the increased globalization of agriculture, the introduction of new viruses from exotic locations and their establishment in new production regions and even new crops is a growing concern. Advancing knowledge of the epidemiology of plant viruses including development of new diagnostic methods, virus surveillance, and modeling, virus ecology and evolution, virus interactions with insect vectors, and other factors are important toward reducing the spread of plant viruses and managing virus diseases.


Subject(s)
Plant Diseases , Plant Viruses , Crops, Agricultural , Climate , Climate Change
3.
Phytopathology ; 113(7): 1141-1158, 2023 Jul.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36935375

ABSTRACT

A synoptic review of plant disease epidemics and outbreaks was made using two complementary approaches. The first approach involved reviewing scientific literature published in 2021, in which quantitative data related to new plant disease epidemics or outbreaks were obtained via surveys or similar methodologies. The second approach involved retrieving new records added in 2021 to the CABI Distribution Database, which contains over a million global geographic records of organisms from over 50,000 species. The literature review retrieved 186 articles, describing studies in 62 categories (pathogen species/species complexes) across more than 40 host species on six continents. Pathogen species with more than five articles were Bursaphelenchus xylophilus, 'Candidatus Liberibacter asiaticus', cassava mosaic viruses, citrus tristeza virus, Erwinia amylovora, Fusarium spp. complexes, F. oxysporum f. sp. cubense, Magnaporthe oryzae, maize lethal necrosis co-infecting viruses, Meloidogyne spp. complexes, Pseudomonas syringae pvs., Puccinia striiformis f. sp. tritici, Xylella fastidiosa, and Zymoseptoria tritici. Automated searches of the CABI Distribution Database identified 617 distribution records new in 2021 of 283 plant pathogens. A further manual review of these records confirmed 15 pathogens reported in new locations: apple hammerhead viroid, apple rubbery wood viruses, Aphelenchoides besseyi, Biscogniauxia mediterranea, 'Ca. Liberibacter asiaticus', citrus tristeza virus, Colletotrichum siamense, cucurbit chlorotic yellows virus, Erwinia rhapontici, Erysiphe corylacearum, F. oxysporum f. sp. cubense Tropical race 4, Globodera rostochiensis, Nothophoma quercina, potato spindle tuber viroid, and tomato brown rugose fruit virus. Of these, four pathogens had at least 25% of all records reported in 2021. We assessed two of these pathogens-tomato brown rugose fruit virus and cucurbit chlorotic yellows virus-to be actively emerging in/spreading to new locations. Although three important pathogens-'Ca. Liberibacter asiaticus', citrus tristeza virus, and F. oxysporum f. sp. cubense-were represented in the results of both our literature review and our interrogation of the CABI Distribution Database, in general, our dual approaches revealed distinct sets of plant disease outbreaks and new records, with little overlap. [Formula: see text] Copyright © 2023 The Author(s). This is an open access article distributed under the CC BY 4.0 International license.


Subject(s)
Citrus , Rhizobiaceae , Plant Diseases , Disease Outbreaks
4.
PLoS Comput Biol ; 17(12): e1009759, 2021 12.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34968387

ABSTRACT

Many plant viruses are transmitted by insect vectors. Transmission can be described as persistent or non-persistent depending on rates of acquisition, retention, and inoculation of virus. Much experimental evidence has accumulated indicating vectors can prefer to settle and/or feed on infected versus noninfected host plants. For persistent transmission, vector preference can also be conditional, depending on the vector's own infection status. Since viruses can alter host plant quality as a resource for feeding, infection potentially also affects vector population dynamics. Here we use mathematical modelling to develop a theoretical framework addressing the effects of vector preferences for landing, settling and feeding-as well as potential effects of infection on vector population density-on plant virus epidemics. We explore the consequences of preferences that depend on the host (infected or healthy) and vector (viruliferous or nonviruliferous) phenotypes, and how this is affected by the form of transmission, persistent or non-persistent. We show how different components of vector preference have characteristic effects on both the basic reproduction number and the final incidence of disease. We also show how vector preference can induce bistability, in which the virus is able to persist even when it cannot invade from very low densities. Feedbacks between plant infection status, vector population dynamics and virus transmission potentially lead to very complex dynamics, including sustained oscillations. Our work is supported by an interactive interface https://plantdiseasevectorpreference.herokuapp.com/. Our model reiterates the importance of coupling virus infection to vector behaviour, life history and population dynamics to fully understand plant virus epidemics.


Subject(s)
Insect Vectors , Plant Diseases , Plant Viruses , Animals , Computational Biology , Genetic Fitness , Host-Pathogen Interactions , Insect Vectors/genetics , Insect Vectors/physiology , Insect Vectors/virology , Models, Biological , Plant Diseases/statistics & numerical data , Plant Diseases/virology , Plant Viruses/genetics , Plant Viruses/pathogenicity
5.
Plants (Basel) ; 9(12)2020 Dec 14.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33327457

ABSTRACT

Epidemiology is the science of how disease develops in populations, with applications in human, animal and plant diseases. For plant diseases, epidemiology has developed as a quantitative science with the aims of describing, understanding and predicting epidemics, and intervening to mitigate their consequences in plant populations. Although the central focus of epidemiology is at the population level, it is often necessary to recognise the system hierarchies present by scaling down to the individual plant/cellular level and scaling up to the community/landscape level. This is particularly important for diseases caused by plant viruses, which in most cases are transmitted by arthropod vectors. This leads to range of virus-plant, virus-vector and vector-plant interactions giving a distinctive character to plant virus epidemiology (whilst recognising that some fungal, oomycete and bacterial pathogens are also vector-borne). These interactions have epidemiological, ecological and evolutionary consequences with implications for agronomic practices, pest and disease management, host resistance deployment, and the health of wild plant communities. Over the last two decades, there have been attempts to bring together these differing standpoints into a new synthesis, although this is more apparent for evolutionary and ecological approaches, perhaps reflecting the greater emphasis on shorter often annual time scales in epidemiological studies. It is argued here that incorporating an epidemiological perspective, specifically quantitative, into this developing synthesis will lead to new directions in plant virus research and disease management. This synthesis can serve to further consolidate and transform epidemiology as a key element in plant virus research.

6.
PLoS Biol ; 17(12): e3000551, 2019 12.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31794547

ABSTRACT

If pathogen species, strains, or clones do not interact, intuition suggests the proportion of coinfected hosts should be the product of the individual prevalences. Independence consequently underpins the wide range of methods for detecting pathogen interactions from cross-sectional survey data. However, the very simplest of epidemiological models challenge the underlying assumption of statistical independence. Even if pathogens do not interact, death of coinfected hosts causes net prevalences of individual pathogens to decrease simultaneously. The induced positive correlation between prevalences means the proportion of coinfected hosts is expected to be higher than multiplication would suggest. By modelling the dynamics of multiple noninteracting pathogens causing chronic infections, we develop a pair of novel tests of interaction that properly account for nonindependence between pathogens causing lifelong infection. Our tests allow us to reinterpret data from previous studies including pathogens of humans, plants, and animals. Our work demonstrates how methods to identify interactions between pathogens can be updated using simple epidemic models.


Subject(s)
Coinfection/epidemiology , Host-Pathogen Interactions/physiology , Infections/epidemiology , Animals , Cross-Sectional Studies , Epidemics/statistics & numerical data , Humans , Models, Biological , Prevalence
7.
Viruses ; 11(12)2019 12 13.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31847125

ABSTRACT

Co-infection of plant hosts by two or more viruses is common in agricultural crops and natural plant communities. A variety of models have been used to investigate the dynamics of co-infection which track only the disease status of infected and co-infected plants, and which do not explicitly track the density of inoculative vectors. Much less attention has been paid to the role of vector transmission in co-infection, that is, acquisition and inoculation and their synergistic and antagonistic interactions. In this investigation, a general epidemiological model is formulated for one vector species and one plant species with potential co-infection in the host plant by two viruses. The basic reproduction number provides conditions for successful invasion of a single virus. We derive a new invasion threshold which provides conditions for successful invasion of a second virus. These two thresholds highlight some key epidemiological parameters important in vector transmission. To illustrate the flexibility of our model, we examine numerically two special cases of viral invasion. In the first case, one virus species depends on an autonomous virus for its successful transmission and in the second case, both viruses are unable to invade alone but can co-infect the host plant when prevalence is high.


Subject(s)
Coinfection , Disease Vectors , Plant Diseases/virology , Plant Viruses/physiology , Algorithms , Animals , Models, Biological
8.
Virus Res ; 241: 196-202, 2017 09 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28642061

ABSTRACT

The basic reproduction number R0 is a key parameter in plant disease epidemiology, which largely determines whether or not an epidemic will occur in a plant population. The next generation matrix approach to deriving and calculating the basic reproduction number of a plant virus epidemic is described. The approach is illustrated through a series of examples of increasing complexity, ranging from the simplest case of one vector transmitting one virus to a single host, to the case of multiple vectors, to combined horizontal (vector) and vertical (seed) transmission, and where vector control using insecticides is practised. The importance of parameters representing host and vector population dynamics and their interaction in the absence of disease is stressed, and the constraints these place on the calculation of the basic reproduction number. Finally, mention is made of further elaborations to the approach that could prove useful in plant virus epidemiology.


Subject(s)
Basic Reproduction Number/statistics & numerical data , Models, Biological , Plant Diseases/virology , Plants/virology , Animals , Disease Transmission, Infectious , Disease Vectors , Seeds/virology
9.
Phytopathology ; 107(10): 1095-1108, 2017 10.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28535127

ABSTRACT

Maize lethal necrosis (MLN) has emerged as a serious threat to food security in sub-Saharan Africa. MLN is caused by coinfection with two viruses, Maize chlorotic mottle virus and a potyvirus, often Sugarcane mosaic virus. To better understand the dynamics of MLN and to provide insight into disease management, we modeled the spread of the viruses causing MLN within and between growing seasons. The model allows for transmission via vectors, soil, and seed, as well as exogenous sources of infection. Following model parameterization, we predict how management affects disease prevalence and crop performance over multiple seasons. Resource-rich farmers with large holdings can achieve good control by combining clean seed and insect control. However, crop rotation is often required to effect full control. Resource-poor farmers with smaller holdings must rely on rotation and roguing, and achieve more limited control. For both types of farmer, unless management is synchronized over large areas, exogenous sources of infection can thwart control. As well as providing practical guidance, our modeling framework is potentially informative for other cropping systems in which coinfection has devastating effects. Our work also emphasizes how mathematical modeling can inform management of an emerging disease even when epidemiological information remains scanty. [Formula: see text] Copyright © 2017 The Author(s). This is an open access article distributed under the CC BY-NC-ND 4.0 International license .


Subject(s)
Models, Theoretical , Plant Diseases/prevention & control , Potyvirus/isolation & purification , Tombusviridae/isolation & purification , Zea mays/virology , Agriculture , Coinfection , Insect Control , Kenya , Plant Diseases/statistics & numerical data , Plant Diseases/virology , Seeds/virology
10.
Virus Res ; 241: 77-87, 2017 09 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28434906

ABSTRACT

Virus-plant interactions range from parasitism to mutualism. Viruses have been shown to increase fecundity of infected plants in comparison with uninfected plants under certain environmental conditions. Increased fecundity of infected plants may benefit both the plant and the virus as seed transmission is one of the main virus transmission pathways, in addition to vector transmission. Trade-offs between vertical (seed) and horizontal (vector) transmission pathways may involve virulence, defined here as decreased fecundity in infected plants. To better understand plant-virus symbiosis evolution, we explore the ecological and evolutionary interplay of virus transmission modes when infection can lead to an increase in plant fecundity. We consider two possible trade-offs: vertical seed transmission vs infected plant fecundity, and horizontal vector transmission vs infected plant fecundity (virulence). Through mathematical models and numerical simulations, we show (1) that a trade-off between virulence and vertical transmission can lead to virus extinction during the course of evolution, (2) that evolutionary branching can occur with subsequent coexistence of mutualistic and parasitic virus strains, and (3) that mutualism can out-compete parasitism in the long-run. In passing, we show that ecological bi-stability is possible in a very simple discrete-time epidemic model. Possible extensions of this study include the evolution of conditional (environment-dependent) mutualism in plant viruses.


Subject(s)
Host-Pathogen Interactions , Plant Diseases/virology , Plant Viruses/pathogenicity , Plants/virology , Disease Transmission, Infectious , Models, Biological , Seeds/virology , Symbiosis/physiology , Virulence
11.
J Theor Biol ; 396: 75-89, 2016 May 07.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26908348

ABSTRACT

The evolution of plant virus transmission pathways is studied through transmission via seed, pollen, or a vector. We address the questions: under what circumstances does vector transmission make pollen transmission redundant? Can evolution lead to the coexistence of multiple virus transmission pathways? We restrict the analysis to an annual plant population in which reproduction through seed is obligatory. A semi-discrete model with pollen, seed, and vector transmission is formulated to investigate these questions. We assume vector and pollen transmission rates are frequency-dependent and density-dependent, respectively. An ecological stability analysis is performed for the semi-discrete model and used to inform an evolutionary study of trade-offs between pollen and seed versus vector transmission. Evolutionary dynamics critically depend on the shape of the trade-off functions. Assuming a trade-off between pollen and vector transmission, evolution either leads to an evolutionarily stable mix of pollen and vector transmission (concave trade-off) or there is evolutionary bi-stability (convex trade-off); the presence of pollen transmission may prevent evolution of vector transmission. Considering a trade-off between seed and vector transmission, evolutionary branching and the subsequent coexistence of pollen-borne and vector-borne strains is possible. This study contributes to the theory behind the diversity of plant-virus transmission patterns observed in nature.


Subject(s)
Evolution, Molecular , Models, Biological , Plant Diseases/virology , Plant Viruses/physiology
12.
Philos Trans R Soc Lond B Biol Sci ; 366(1573): 1933-42, 2011 Jul 12.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21624914

ABSTRACT

Animal and plant diseases pose a serious and continuing threat to food security, food safety, national economies, biodiversity and the rural environment. New challenges, including climate change, regulatory developments, changes in the geographical concentration and size of livestock holdings, and increasing trade make this an appropriate time to assess the state of knowledge about the impact that diseases have and the ways in which they are managed and controlled. In this paper, the case is explored for an interdisciplinary approach to studying the management of infectious animal and plant diseases. Reframing the key issues through incorporating both social and natural science research can provide a holistic understanding of disease and increase the policy relevance and impact of research. Finally, in setting out the papers in this Theme Issue, a picture of current and future animal and plant disease threats is presented.


Subject(s)
Communicable Disease Control/methods , Communicable Diseases/veterinary , Interdisciplinary Communication , Plant Diseases/prevention & control , Agriculture/economics , Animals , Climate Change , Food Safety , Food Supply , Global Health , Humans , Internationality
13.
Pest Manag Sci ; 67(9): 1082-92, 2011 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21495152

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: The U.K. government has published plans to reduce U.K. agriculture's greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions. At the same time, the goal of global food security requires an increase in arable crop yields. Foliar disease control measures such as fungicides have an important role in meeting both objectives. RESULTS: It is estimated that U.K. winter barley production is associated with GHG emissions of 2770 kg CO2 eq. ha(-1) of crop and 355 kg CO2 eq. t(-1) of grain. Foliar disease control by fungicides is associated with decreases in GHG emissions of 42-60 kg CO2 eq. t(-1) in U.K. winter barley and 29-39 kg CO2 eq. t(-1) in U.K. spring barley. The sensitivity of these results to the impact of disease control on yield and to variant GHG emissions assumptions is presented. Fungicide treatment of the major U.K. arable crops is estimated to have directly decreased U.K. GHG emissions by over 1.5 Mt CO2 eq. in 2009. CONCLUSION: Crop disease control measures such as fungicide treatment reduce the GHG emissions associated with producing a tonne of grain. As national demand for food increases, greater yields as a result of disease control also decrease the need to convert land from non-arable to arable use, which further mitigates GHG emissions.


Subject(s)
Carbon Dioxide/metabolism , Crops, Agricultural/metabolism , Fungicides, Industrial/pharmacology , Greenhouse Effect , Hordeum/metabolism , Plant Diseases/microbiology , Plant Diseases/prevention & control , Carbon Cycle , Carbon Dioxide/analysis , Crops, Agricultural/growth & development , Crops, Agricultural/microbiology , Food Supply , Fungi/drug effects , Fungi/physiology , Hordeum/growth & development , Hordeum/microbiology , Seasons , United Kingdom
14.
Phytopathology ; 101(4): 392-403, 2011 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21062110

ABSTRACT

There is increasing use of networks in ecology and epidemiology, but still relatively little application in phytopathology. Networks are sets of elements (nodes) connected in various ways by links (edges). Network analysis aims to understand system dynamics and outcomes in relation to network characteristics. Many existing natural, social, and technological networks have been shown to have small-world (local connectivity with short-cuts) and scale-free (presence of super-connected nodes) properties. In this review, we discuss how network concepts can be applied in plant pathology from the molecular to the landscape and global level. Wherever disease spread occurs not just because of passive/natural dispersion but also due to artificial movements, it makes sense to superimpose realistic models of the trade in plants on spatially explicit models of epidemic development. We provide an example of an emerging pathosystem (Phytophthora ramorum) where a theoretical network approach has proven particularly fruitful in analyzing the spread of disease in the UK plant trade. These studies can help in assessing the future threat posed by similar emerging pathogens. Networks have much potential in plant epidemiology and should become part of the standard curriculum.


Subject(s)
Models, Biological , Plant Diseases/etiology , Agriculture , Commerce , Computer Simulation , Demography , Disease Transmission, Infectious/statistics & numerical data , Epidemics/statistics & numerical data , Gene Regulatory Networks , Genes, Plant , Human Activities , Humans , Pathology, Molecular/methods , Phytophthora/pathogenicity , Plant Diseases/statistics & numerical data , Plants/parasitology
15.
J Theor Biol ; 258(2): 198-207, 2009 May 21.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19490879

ABSTRACT

A model for indirect vector transmission and epidemic development of plant viruses is extended to consider direct transmission through vector mating. A basic reproduction number is derived which is the sum of the R(0) values specific for three transmission routes. We analyse the model to determine the effect of direct transmission on plant disease control directed against indirect transmission. Increasing the rate of horizontal sexual transmission means that vector control rate or indirect transmission rate must be increased/decreased substantially to maintain R(0) at a value less than 1. By contrast, proportionately increasing the probability of transovarial transmission has little effect. Expressions are derived for the steady-state values of the viruliferous vector population. There is clear advantage for an insect virus in indirect transmission to plants, especially where the sexual and transovarial transmission rates are low; however information on virulence-transmissibility relationships is required to explain the evolution of a plant virus from an insect virus.


Subject(s)
Plant Diseases , Plants/virology , Virus Diseases/transmission , Animals , Basic Reproduction Number , Insect Control , Insect Vectors , Insecta/virology , Insecticides/pharmacology , Models, Biological , Plant Viruses/physiology , Virulence , Virus Assembly , Virus Diseases/prevention & control
16.
J Theor Biol ; 252(4): 621-32, 2008 Jun 21.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-18394653

ABSTRACT

A model of compensatory evolution with respect to fungicide resistance in a haploid clonally reproducing fungus is developed in which compensatory mutations mitigate fitness costs associated with resistance. The role of mutation, migration and selection in invasion of rare genotypes when the environment changes from unsprayed to sprayed and from sprayed to unsprayed is analysed in detail. In some circumstances (ignoring back mutations) stable internal steady-state values for multiple genotypes can be obtained. In these cases a threshold value (f*) for the fraction of the population exposed to the fungicide can be derived for the transition between different steady-state conditions. Conditions are derived for invasion-when-rare of resistant genotypes at boundary equilibria established sometime after the onset of spraying and conversely of sensitive genotypes sometime after the cessation of spraying are derived. In these cases conditions are presented for (a) the invasion of a resistant genotype with a compensatory mutation (resistant-compensated) into a sensitive-uncompensated population that has re-equilibrated following the onset of spraying and (b) the invasion of a susceptible-uncompensated genotype into a resistant-compensated population that has re-equilibrated following the cessation of spraying, provided certain conditions are met. A resistant-compensated genotype may be fixed (or at near-fixation) in the population following a period of spraying, provided the mean intrinsic growth rate of the resistant-compensated genotype in a sprayed environment (over exposed and non-exposed parts of the population) is greater than that of the susceptible-uncompensated genotype. The fraction of the population exposed (the efficiency of spraying) is critical in this respect. However, it is possible for a sensitive-uncompensated genotype to invade provided there is no fitness gain associated with the resistant-compensated genotype, introduction by migration occurs following equilibration of the population to the new environment, and competitive effects are re-imposed when spraying ceases. We further derive a threshold level for the resident resistant-compensated population to reduce to following the cessation of spraying, such that the introduced susceptible-uncompensated genotype will invade. These results will be of use in determining the long-term persistence of resistance in a pathogen population once a fungicide is no longer effective and removed from use.


Subject(s)
Drug Resistance, Fungal/genetics , Evolution, Molecular , Fungi/drug effects , Models, Genetic , Mutation , Adaptation, Physiological/genetics , Fungi/genetics , Fungi/growth & development , Fungicides, Industrial/pharmacology , Genes, Fungal , Genotype , Haploidy , Selection, Genetic
17.
FEMS Microbiol Ecol ; 62(2): 222-32, 2007 Nov.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17645531

ABSTRACT

Armillaria lutea rhizomorphs in soil were mapped over areas of 25 m2 at a Pinus nigra (site I) and a Picea abies (site II) plantation. Rhizomorph density was 4.3 and 6.1 m m(-2) soil surface with 84% and 48% of the total rhizomorph length in the mapped area interconnected in a network at site I and site II, respectively. At site I there were only two network attachments to Pinus stumps, but at site II many more to Picea roots and stumps. Anastomoses of rhizomorphs resulted in cyclic paths, parts of the network that start and end at the same point. Connections between different rhizomorph segments were shown to allow gaseous exchange. The network at site I consisted of 169 rhizomorphs ('edges'), and 107 rhizomorph nodes ('vertices'). Disruption of two critical edges ('bridges') would lead to large parts (13% and 11%) being disconnected from the remainder of the mapped network. There was a low probability that amputation of a randomly chosen edge would separate the network into two disconnected components. The high level of connectedness may enhance redistribution of nutrients and provide a robust rhizomorph structure, allowing Armillaria to respond opportunistically to spatially and temporally changing environments.


Subject(s)
Agaricales/physiology , Ecosystem , Mycorrhizae/physiology , Pinus/microbiology , Soil Microbiology , Agaricales/growth & development , Mycorrhizae/growth & development
18.
Proc Biol Sci ; 272(1558): 85-9, 2005 Jan 07.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-15875574

ABSTRACT

Populations of pathogenic organisms often evolve resistance in response to the use of pesticides or antibiotics. This rise of resistance may be followed by a fall when chemical control is suspended and resistance alleles carry a fitness cost. Another possibility is that mutations at secondary loci compensate for the cost, usually without loss of resistance. This enables resistant types to withstand invasion by the susceptible wild-type; resistance then persists in the population, which reduces the efficacy of future pesticide or antibiotic use. We examined a two-locus model of a haploid organism that adapts to the cost of resistance by a single compensatory mutation. We addressed the question how different combinations of cost and compensation and different levels of recombination affect the consequences of a single pesticide application. Resistance will become fixed in the population when the fraction of the population exposed to pesticide exceeds the cost of resistance. Compensatory mutations reduce the cost of resistance and therefore this threshold level of pesticide use. In the absence of pesticide, recombination promotes stability of equilibria. In the presence of pesticide, recombination accelerates the fixation of resistance and compensating alleles; recombination may also enable the persistence of compensated resistant types after pesticide use.


Subject(s)
Adaptation, Biological/genetics , Drug Resistance/genetics , Genetics, Population , Models, Genetic , Selection, Genetic , Haploidy , Mutation/genetics , Time Factors
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