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1.
Physiol Plant ; 147(4): 502-13, 2013 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22905764

ABSTRACT

Infection by eastern dwarf mistletoe (Arceuthobium pusillum) modifies needle and branch morphology and hastens white spruce (Picea glauca) mortality. We examined potential causal mechanisms and assessed the impacts of infection-induced alterations to host development and performance across scales ranging from needle hormone contents to bole expansion. Needles on infected branches (IBs) possessed higher total cytokinin (CK) and lower abscisic acid contents than needles on uninfected branches (UBs). IBs exhibited greater xylem growth than same-aged UBs, which is consistent with the promotive effect of CKs on vascular differentiation and organ sink strength. Elevated CK content may also explain the dense secondary and tertiary branching observed at the site of infection, i.e. the formation of 'witches' brooms' with significantly lower light capture efficiencies. Observed hormone perturbations were consistent with higher rates of transpiration, lower water use efficiencies (WUEs) and more negative needle carbon isotope ratios observed for IBs. Observed reductions in needle size allowed IBs to compensate for reduced hydraulic conductivity. Severe infections resulted in dramatically decreased diameter growth of the bole. It seems likely that the modifications to host hormone contents by eastern dwarf mistletoe infection led white spruce trees to dedicate a disproportionate fraction of their photoassimilate and other resources to self-shaded branches with low WUE. This would have decreased the potential for fixed carbon accumulation, generating a decline in the whole-tree resource pool. As mistletoe infections grew in size and the number of IBs increased, this burden was manifested as increasingly greater reductions in bole growth.


Subject(s)
Host-Parasite Interactions , Picea/growth & development , Picea/metabolism , Viscaceae/growth & development , Abscisic Acid/metabolism , Carbon Dioxide/metabolism , Carbon Isotopes/analysis , Carbon Isotopes/metabolism , Light , Maine , Plant Growth Regulators/metabolism , Plant Shoots/physiology , Plant Stems/physiology , Water
2.
Oecologia ; 146(2): 179-89, 2005 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16086165

ABSTRACT

Much research has focused on effects of plant parasites on host-plant physiology and growth, but little is known about effects of host physiological condition on parasite growth. Using the parasitic dwarf mistletoe Arceuthobium vaginatum subsp. cryptopodum (Viscaceae) and its host Pinus ponderosa, we investigated whether changes in host physiological condition influenced mistletoe shoot development in northern Arizona forests. We conducted two studies in two consecutive years and used forest thinning (i.e., competitive release) to manipulate host physiological condition. We removed dwarf mistletoe shoots in April, before the onset of the growing season, and measured the amount of regrowth in the first season after forest thinning (Study I: n=38 trees; Study II: n=35 trees). Thinning increased tree uptake of water and carbon in both studies, but had no effect on leaf N concentration or delta13C. Mistletoe shoot growth was greater on trees with high uptake of water and carbon in thinned stands than trees with low uptake in unthinned stands. These findings show that increased resource uptake by host trees increases resources to these heterotrophic dwarf mistletoes, and links mistletoe performance to changes in host physiological condition.


Subject(s)
Pinus ponderosa/physiology , Pinus ponderosa/parasitology , Viscaceae/physiology , Arizona , Biomass , Ecosystem , Host-Parasite Interactions , Light , Pinus ponderosa/growth & development , Pinus ponderosa/radiation effects , Rain , Seasons , Trees/physiology , Viscaceae/growth & development , Viscaceae/radiation effects
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