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      Emerging fungal threats to animal, plant and ecosystem health.

      Nature
      Animals, Communicable Diseases, Emerging, epidemiology, microbiology, veterinary, Ecosystem, Extinction, Biological, Food Supply, Fungi, classification, genetics, isolation & purification, pathogenicity, Humans, Mycoses, Plants, Virulence

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          Abstract

          The past two decades have seen an increasing number of virulent infectious diseases in natural populations and managed landscapes. In both animals and plants, an unprecedented number of fungal and fungal-like diseases have recently caused some of the most severe die-offs and extinctions ever witnessed in wild species, and are jeopardizing food security. Human activity is intensifying fungal disease dispersal by modifying natural environments and thus creating new opportunities for evolution. We argue that nascent fungal infections will cause increasing attrition of biodiversity, with wider implications for human and ecosystem health, unless steps are taken to tighten biosecurity worldwide.

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          Most cited references60

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          Climate Change 2007

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            Emerging Infectious Diseases of Wildlife-- Threats to Biodiversity and Human Health

            P. Daszak (2000)
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              Aerial dispersal of pathogens on the global and continental scales and its impact on plant disease.

              Some of the most striking and extreme consequences of rapid, long-distance aerial dispersal involve pathogens of crop plants. Long-distance dispersal of fungal spores by the wind can spread plant diseases across and even between continents and reestablish diseases in areas where host plants are seasonally absent. For such epidemics to occur, hosts that are susceptible to the same pathogen genotypes must be grown over wide areas, as is the case with many modern crops. The strongly stochastic nature of long-distance dispersal causes founder effects in pathogen populations, such that the genotypes that cause epidemics in new territories or on cultivars with previously effective resistance genes may be atypical. Similar but less extreme population dynamics may arise from long-distance aerial dispersal of other organisms, including plants, viruses, and fungal pathogens of humans.
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