Title: DISEASES AND TREES
1DISEASES AND TREES
- What exactly is a disease? It is the outcome of
an interaction between a plant and the
environment, resulting in an altered physiology
of the host - Sustained interactionbiotic
- Single event abiotic
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4What is a pathogen?
- Strictly speaking a pathogen is the causal agent
of disease - Bacteria
- Viruses
- Nematodes
- Stramenopiles
- Algae
- Phytoplasmas
- Higher plants
5And of course fungi
- Fungi saprophytic, symbionts, and pathogens
- Polyphyletic group in evolutionary terms
- Basidiomycetes
- Ascomycetes
- Zygomycets
- Animals
- Plants
- Red algae
- Brown algae
- Myxomycetes
6Fungi again!
- Filamentous somatic (vegetative body)
- High surface, good for extrogenous digestion
- Good infection structures, infection peg,
appressoria, rhizomorphs - Chitin in cell wall
- Nuclear ploidy very unique
- Reproduction by spores asexual mode very well
represented - Small nuclei, but with a lot of plasticity
7Hyphae, sporangia, and zoospores of P. ramorum
8Fungi do not photosynthesize
- Biotrophic mycorrhyzae, rusts
- Endophites clavicipetaceae,
- Necrotrophic most pathogens
- Saprobes primary (involved in litter
decomposition)
9Some pathogen roles in natural plant communities
- Selection of individuals best suited for the site
- Maintenance of genetic diversity and stability in
host plant populations - Establishment or maintenance of host geographic
ranges - Natural succession
- Regulation of stand density, structure, and
composition
10DISEASE!!
- Symptoms vs. signs e.g. chlorosis vs. fruit-body
- The disease triangle
11host-pathogen-environment
- Susceptibility of individuals or of portions of
individuals - Genetic variability
- Basic compatibility (susceptibility) between host
and pathogen - Ability to withstand physiological alterations
12Genetic resistance in host
Length of lesion (mm) Proportion of stem girdled ()
Nicasio\ 42.5a 0.71a
China Camp 40.5a 0.74a
San Diego 27.8b 0.41b
Ojai 25.0b 0.47b
Interior live oak (Maricopa) 14.1b 0.33b
13host-pathogen-environment
- Basic compatibility with host (virulence)
- Ability to maintain diversity sex vs. no sex
- Size of genetic pool
- Agressiveness (pathogenicity) towards hosts
- Ability to survive without host
14Chlamydospores of P. ramorum
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16West Coast
Europe
P. lateralis
17host-pathogen-environment
- Temperatures
- Shading
- Relative humidity
- Free standing water
- pH and any potentially predisposing factors
- Nutrient status
18Colony diameter (mm) at 13 days
19Presence of free water
Between 6 and 12 hours required for infection of
bay leaves
20Human activities affecting disease incidence in
forests
- Introduction of exotic pathogens
- Planting trees in inappropriate sites
- Changing stand density, age structure,
composition, fire frequency - Wound creation
- Pollution, etc.
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22Effects of fire exclusion
23DISEASE plant microbe interaction
- Basic compatibility need to be present
- Chemotaxis, thighmotropy
- Avirulence in pathogen matched by resistance in
host according to the gene for gene model - Pathogenicity factors such as toxins and enzymes
important in the infection process
24Effects of diseases on host mortality, growth and
reproduction
- Young plants killed before reaching reproductive
age - Affect reproductive output
- Directly affect flowers and fruits
25Complexity of forest diseases
- At the individual tree level 3 dimensional
- At the landscape level host diversity,
microclimates, etc. - At the temporal level
26Complexity of forest diseases
- Primary vs. secondary
- Introduced vs. native
- Air-dispersed vs. splash-dispersed, vs. animal
vectored - Root disease vs. stem. vs. wilt, foliar
- Systemic or localized
27Progression of cankers
Hypoxylon, a secondary sapwood decayer will
appear
Older canker with dry seep
28Stem canker on coast live oak
29Cankers by P. ramorum at 3 months from time of
inoculation on two coast live oaks
30Root disease center in true fir caused by H.
annosum
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33Categories of wild plant diseases
- Seed decay
- Seedling diseases
- Foliage diseases
- Systemic infections
- Parasitic plants
- Cankers, wilts , and diebacks
- Root and butt rots
- Floral diseases
34Seed diseases
- Up to 88 mortality in tropical Uganda
- More significant when seed production is episodic
35Seedling diseases
- Specific diseases, but also diseases of adult
trees can affect seedlings - Pythium, Phytophthora, Rhizoctonia, Fusarium are
the three most important ones - Pre- vs. post-emergence
- Impact up to 65 mortality in black cherry.
These diseases build up in litter - Shady and moist environment is very conducive to
these diseases
36Foliar diseases
- In general they reduce photosynthetic ability by
reducing leaf area. At times this reduction is
actually beneficial - Problem is accentuated in the case of small
plants and in the case other health issues are
superimposed - Often, e.g. with anthracnose,needle cast and
rust diseases leaves are point of entry for twig
and branch infection with permanent damage
inflicted
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39Systemic infections
- Viral?
- Phytoplasmas
- Peronospora and smuts can lead to over 50
mortality - Endophytism usually considered beneficial
40Grass endophytes
- Clavicipetaceae and grasses, e.g. tall fescue
- Mutualism antiherbivory, protection from
drought, increased productivity - Classic example of coevolutionary development
Epichloe infects flowers of sexually
reproducing fescue, Neotyphodium is vertically
transmitted in species whose sexual reproductive
ability has been aborted
41Parasitic plants
- True (Phoradendron) and dwarf mistletoe
(Arceuthobium) - Effects
- Up to 65 reduction in growth (Douglas-fir)
- 3-4 fold mortality rate increase
- Reduced seed and cone production
- Problem accentuated in multistoried uneven aged
forests
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45Cankers, wilts, and die-backs
- Includes extremely aggressive, often easy to
import tree diseases pine pitch canker, Dutch
elm disease, Chestnut blight, White pine blister
rust - Lethal in most cases, generally narrow host range
with the exception of Sudden Oak Death
46Root diseases
- Extremely common, probably represent the most
economically damaging type of diseases - Effects tree mortality (direct and indirect),
cull, effect on forest structure, effect on
composition, stand density, growth rate - Heterobasidion, Armillaria, Phellinus weirii,
Phytophthora cinnamomi
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48Floral diseases
- Pollinator vectored smut on silene offers an
example of well known dynamic interaction in
which pathogen drives genetic variability of
hosts and is affected by environmental condition - Puccinia monoica produces pseudoflowers that
mimic real flowers. Effects reduction in seed
production, reduction in pollinators visits
49POPULATION DYNAMICS
- Species interactions and diversity
50Density-dependence
- Most diseases show positive density dependence
- Negative dependence likely to be linked to
limited inoculum e.g. vectors limited - If pathogen is host-specific overall density may
not be best parameter, but density of susceptible
host/race - In some cases opposite may be true especially if
alternate hosts are taken into account
51Counterweights to numerical effects
- Compensatory response of survival can exceed
negative effect of pathogen - carry over effects?
- NEGATIVE progeny of infected individuals less
fit - POSITIVE progeny more resistant (shown with
herbivory)
52Disease and competition
- Competition normally is conducive to increased
rates of disease limited resources weaken hosts,
contagion is easier - Pathogens can actually cryptically drive
competition, by disproportionally affecting one
species and favoring another
53Diseases and succession
- Soil feedbacks normally its negative. Plants
growing in their own soil repeatedly have higher
mortality rate. This is the main reason for
agricultural rotations and in natural systems
ensures a trajectory towards maintaining
diversity - Phellinus weirii takes out Douglas fir and
hemlock leaving room for alder
54Janzel-Connol
- Regeneration near parents more at riak of
becoming infected by disease because of proximity
to mother (Botryosphaeria, Phytophthora spp.).
Maintains spatial heterogeneity in tropical
forests - Effects are difficult to measure if there is
little host diversity, not enough
host-specificity on the pathogen side, and if
periodic disturbances play an important role in
the life of the ecosystem
55The red queen hypothesis
- Coevolutionary arm race
- Dependent on
- Generation time has a direct effect on rates of
evolutionary change - Genetic variability available
- Rates of outcrossing (Hardy-weinberg equilibrium)
- Metapopulation structure
56Frequency-, or density dependent, or balancing
selection
- New alleles, if beneficial because linked to a
trait linked to fitness will be positively
selected for. - Example two races of pathogen are present, but
only one resistant host variety, suggests second
pathogen race has arrived recently
57Diseases as strong forces in plant evolution
- Selection pressure
- Co-evolutionary processes
- Conceptual processes potentially leading to a
balance between different ecosystem components - How to measure it parallel evolution of host and
pathogen
58 - Rapid generation time of pathogens. Reticulated
evolution very likely. Pathogens will be selected
for INCREASED virulence - In the short/medium term with long lived trees a
pathogen is likely to increase its virulence - In long term, selection pressure should result in
widespread resistance among the host
59More details on
- How to differentiate linear from reticulate
evolution comparative studies on topology of
phylogenetic trees will show potential for
horizontal transfers. Phylogenetic analysis
neeeded to confirm horizontal transmission
60Geneaology of S DNA insertion into P ISG
confirms horizontal transfer.Time of
cross-over uncertain
NA S
NA P
EU S
890 bp CIgt0.9
EU F
61Phylogenetic relationships within the
Heterobasidion complex
Fir-Spruce
Pine Europe
Pine N.Am.
62HOST-SPECIFICITY
- Biological species
- Reproductively isolated
- Measurable differential size of structures
- Gene-for-gene defense model
- Sympatric speciation Heterobasidion, Armillaria,
Sphaeropsis, Phellinus, Fusarium forma speciales
63Phylogenetic relationships within the
Heterobasidion complex
Fir-Spruce
Pine Europe
Pine N.Am.
64SEX
- Ability to recombine and adapt
- Definition of population and metapopulation
- Different evolutionary model
- Why sex? Clonal reproductive approach can be very
effective among pathogens
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66The scale of disease
- Dispersal gradients dependent on propagule size,
resilience, ability to dessicate, NOTE not
linear - Important interaction with environment, habitat,
and niche availability. Examples Heterobasidion
in Western Alps, Matsutake mushrooms that offer
example of habitat tracking - Scale of dispersal (implicitely correlated to
metapopulation structure)---two examples
Heterobasidion in California, and Coriolopsis in
Panama
67From Garbelotto and Chapela, Evolution and
biogeography of matsutakes
Biodiversity within species as significant as
between species
68S-P ratio in stumps is highly dependent on
distance from true fir and hemlock stands
.
.
San Diego
69White mangroves Corioloposis caperata
70Distances between study sites
White mangroves Corioloposis caperata
71Forest fragmentation can lead to loss of gene
flow among previously contiguous populations.
The negative repercussions of such genetic
isolation should most severely affect highly
specialized organisms such as some
plant-parasitic fungi.
AFLP study on single spores
Coriolopsis caperata on Laguncularia racemosa
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73From the population level to the individual
- Autoinfection vs. alloinfection
- Primary spreadby spores
- Secondary spreadvegetative, clonal spread, same
genotype . Completely different scales - Coriolus
- Heterobasidion
- Armillaria
- Phellinus
74Recognition of self vs. non self
- Intersterility genes maintain species gene pool.
Homogenic system - Mating genes recognition of other to allow for
recombination. Heterogenic system - Somatic compatibility protection of the
individual.