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Variation in resistance to multiple pathogen species: anther smuts of Silene uniflora
Authors:Janis Antonovics  Amy B Pedersen  Michael E Hood
Institution:1. Department of Biology, University of Virginia, , Charlottesville, Virginia;2. Centre of Immunity, Infection and Evolution, Institute of Evolutionary Biology, School of Biological Sciences, University of Edinburgh, , Edinburgh, EH9 3JT UK;3. Department of Biology, Amherst College, , Amherst, Massachusetts
Abstract:The occurrence of multiple pathogen species on a shared host species is unexpected when they exploit the same micro‐niche within the host individual. One explanation for such observations is the presence of pathogen‐specific resistances segregating within the host population into sites that are differentially occupied by the competing pathogens. This study used experimental inoculations to test whether specific resistances may contribute to the maintenance of two species of anther‐smut fungi, Microbotryum silenes‐inflatae and Microbotryum lagerheimii, in natural populations of Silene uniflora in England and Wales. Overall, resistance to the two pathogens was strongly positively correlated among host populations and to a lesser degree among host families within populations. A few instances of specific resistance were also observed and confirmed by replicated inoculations. The results suggest that selection for resistance to one pathogen may protect the host from the emergence via host shifts of related pathogen species, and conversely that co‐occurrence of two species of pathogens may be dependent on the presence of host genotypes susceptible to both.
Keywords:Co‐infection  general resistance  host specificity     Microbotryum     multi‐parasitized hosts
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