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Host resistance and pathogen infectivity in host populations with varying connectivity
Authors:Ulla Carlsson‐Granér  Peter H. Thrall
Affiliation:1. Department of Ecology and Environmental Sciences, University of Ume?, Ume?, Sweden;2. CSIRO Agriculture Flagship GPO Box 1600, Canberra, ACT, Australia
Abstract:Theory predicts that hosts and pathogens will evolve higher resistance and aggressiveness in systems where populations are spatially connected than in situations in which populations are isolated and dispersal is more local. In a large cross‐inoculation experiment we surveyed patterns of host resistance and pathogen infectivity in anther‐smut diseased Viscaria alpina populations from three contrasting areas where populations range from continuous, through patchy but spatially connected to highly isolated demes. In agreement with theory, isolated populations of V. alpina were more susceptible on average than either patchily distributed or continuous populations. While increased dispersal in connected systems increases disease spread, it may also increase host gene flow and the potential for greater host resistance to evolve. In the Viscaria–Microbotryum system, pathogen infectivity mirrored patterns of host resistance with strains from the isolated populations being the least infective and strains from the more resistant continuous populations being the most infective on average, suggesting that high resistance selects for high infectivity. To our knowledge this study is the first to characterize the impacts of varying spatial connectivity on patterns of host resistance and pathogen infectivity in a natural system.
Keywords:Anther‐smut disease  coevolution  host–  pathogen interactions  inoculation experiment  spatial structure
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