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      Evolution of Disease Severity and Susceptibility in the Asteraceae to the Powdery Mildew Golovinomyces latisporus: Major Phylogenetic Structure Coupled With Highly Variable Disease Severity at Fine Scales

      1 , 2 , 2 , 1
      Plant Disease
      Scientific Societies

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          Abstract

          Pathogen host range and pathogen severity are dependent on interactions with their hosts and are hypothesized to have evolved as products of a coevolutionary arms race. An understanding of the factors that affect host range and pathogen severity is especially crucial in introduced pathogens that infect evolutionarily naïve hosts and cause substantial damage to ecosystems. Powdery mildews are detrimental pathogens found worldwide in managed and natural systems. Golovinomyces latisporus is a powdery mildew species that is especially damaging to plants within Asteraceae and to plants within the genus Helianthus in particular. In this study, we evaluated 126 species within Asteraceae to measure the role of host plant morphophysiological traits and evolutionary history on susceptibility to G. latisporus and disease severity. We observed phylogenetic signal in both susceptibility and severity within and among major clades of the Asteraceae. In general, there was a major phylogenetic structure of host severity to G. latisporus; however, there was some fine-scale phylogenetic variability. Phylogenetic statistical methods showed that chlorophyll content, biomass, stomatal index, and trichome density were not associated with disease severity, thus providing evidence that phylogenetic structure, rather than observed plant morphophysiological traits, is the most reliable predictor of pathogen severity. This work sheds light on the role that evolutionary history plays in plant susceptibility and severity to disease and underscores the relative unimportance of commonly assessed host plant traits in powdery mildew severity.

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          Most cited references3

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          Host range and geographical distribution of the powdery mildew fungi.

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            Echte Mehltaupilze (Erysiphaceae)

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              Systematics, evolution, and biography of Compositae

              Funk V. A. (2009)
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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                (View ORCID Profile)
                Journal
                Plant Disease
                Plant Disease
                Scientific Societies
                0191-2917
                1943-7692
                February 2021
                February 2021
                : 105
                : 2
                : 268-275
                Affiliations
                [1 ]School of Environmental and Forest Sciences, University of Washington, Seattle, WA 98195
                [2 ]Department of Biology, University of Central Florida, Orlando, FL 32816
                Article
                10.1094/PDIS-06-20-1375-RE
                fbf1c31b-46ca-4753-8115-8d24c75a68fa
                © 2021
                History

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