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An experimental field study of anther-smut disease of Silene alba caused by Ustilago violacea: genotypic variation and disease incidence.

Helen M. Alexander
- 01 Jul 1989 - 
- Vol. 43, Iss: 4, pp 835-847
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TLDR
Variation among female genotypes in disease levels was not correlated with either flower production or phenology, suggesting that the sexes differ in their interaction with the pathogen.
Abstract
Twenty cloned genotypes of Silene alba differed greatly (0-100%) in the percentage of flowering plants that became diseased by the anther-smut fungus Ustilago violacea following natural spore dispersal in a two-year field experiment. Male genotypes with the highest percentage of disease had high rates of flower production; this trait may increase the probability of spore deposition on flowers, a common site of infection. Because of this relationship, male genotypes with the highest percentage of disease also produced the most healthy flowers in the two-year period. Flowering early in the season was also a predictor of high disease levels for male genotypes in the first year. Variation among female genotypes in disease levels was not correlated with either flower production or phenology, suggesting that the sexes differ in their interaction with the pathogen. Plants of both sexes that remained nonreproductive the first year but flowered the second year could become diseased due to infection of vegetative tissue. Disease levels of the genotypes following natural spore dispersal were not correlated with disease levels of the genotypes following inoculation of vegetative tissue. This discrepancy points out that the methodology used to investigate genetic variation in disease resistance may affect the results obtained.

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Citations
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Evolutionary ecology of plant diseases in natural ecosystems

TL;DR: This review summarizes the effects of diseases on populations of wild plants, focusing in particular on the mediation of plant competition and succession, the maintenance of plant species diversity, as well as the process of rapid evolutionary changes in host-pathogen symbioses.
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Large-scale spatial dynamics of plants: metapopulations, regional ensembles and patchy populations

TL;DR: In this paper, a critical review of the application of metapopulation theory to the regional dynamics of plants is presented, in particular for populations with long-lived seedbanks.
Journal ArticleDOI

The potential for coevolution in a host-parasitoid system. i. genetic variation within an aphid population in susceptibility to a parasitic wasp.

TL;DR: Significant genetic variance in susceptibility among pea‐aphid clones collected from a single population provides evidence that this aphid population has the potential to evolve resistance in response to selection by one of its major natural enemies.
Journal ArticleDOI

Pathogens and the structure of plant communities

TL;DR: In both cases, the presence of pathogens can lead to changes in the relative abundance of the species in a plant community, which are discernible for many years after the initial disease outbreak has passed.
Journal ArticleDOI

Local maladaptation in the anther-smut fungus microbotryum violaceum to its host plant silene latifolia: evidence from a cross-inoculation experiment.

TL;DR: Local adaptation in the insect‐transmitted fungal pathogen Microbotryum violaceum and its host plant Silene latifolia is studied and it is found that migration among partly isolated populations may introduce novel host plant resistance variants more often than novel parasite virulence variants.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Sex versus non-sex versus parasite

William D. Hamilton
- 01 Oct 1980 - 
TL;DR: It is shown that with frequency dependence sufficiently intense such models generate cycles, and that in certain states of cycling sexual species easily obtain higher long-term geometric mean fitness than any competing monotypic asexual species or mixture of such.
Journal ArticleDOI

Local population differentiation for compatibility in an annual legume and its host-specific fungal pathogen.

TL;DR: Local population differentiation in plant‐pathogen compatibility may be related to A. bracteata's high degree of self‐pollination, which may be a major factor preventing the evolution of increased plant resistance to fungal attack.
Journal ArticleDOI

Disease spread and population dynamics of anther-smut infection of silene alba caused by the fungus ustilago violacea

TL;DR: It was revealed that only 4'%o of plants healthy in one year were diseased the following year, indicating that floral infection does not always lead to successful systemic infection.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Role and Importance of Pathogens in Natural Plant Communities

TL;DR: Fungal pathogens infect plants in the same way fungi do, but there are also basic differences: for example, the directional mobility of the latter pathogens or their vectors and the three-way interaction of vector-transmitted viruses with their hosts.
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