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Genetic structure and local adaptation of European wheat yellow rust populations: the role of temperature-specific adaptation

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TLDR
Understanding the role of temperature‐specific adaptations in the wheat yellow/stripe rust pathogen, Puccinia striiformis f.sp.
Abstract
Environmental heterogeneity influences coevolution and local adaptation in host-parasite systems. This also concerns applied issues, because the geographic range of parasites may depend on their capacity to adapt to abiotic conditions. We studied temperature-specific adaptation in the wheat yellow/stripe rust pathogen, Puccinia striiformis f.sp. tritici (PST). Using laboratory experiments, PST isolates from northern and southern France were studied for their ability to germinate and to infect bread and durum wheat cultivars over a temperature gradient. Pathogen origin × temperature interactions for infectivity and germination rate suggest local adaptation to high- versus low-temperature regimes in south and north. Competition experiments in southern and northern field sites showed a general competitive advantage of southern over northern isolates. This advantage was particularly pronounced in the southern 'home' site, consistent with a model integrating laboratory infectivity and field temperature variation. The stable PST population structure in France likely reflects adaptation to ecological and genetic factors: persistence of southern PST may be due to adaptation to the warmer Mediterranean climate; and persistence of northern PST can be explained by adaptation to commonly used cultivars, for which southern isolates are lacking the relevant virulence genes. Thus, understanding the role of temperature-specific adaptations may help to improve forecast models or breeding programmes.

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Fungal evolutionary genomics provides insight into the mechanisms of adaptive divergence in eukaryotes.

TL;DR: The various ecological sources of divergent selection and genomic changes are outlined, showing that gene loss and changes in gene expression and in genomic architecture are important adaptation processes, in addition to the more widely recognized processes of amino acid substitution and gene duplication.
Journal ArticleDOI

The population biology of fungal invasions.

TL;DR: It is shown that successful invasions can occur even when life history traits are particularly unfavourable to long‐distance dispersal and even with a strong bottleneck, and concluded that fungal invasions are valuable models to contribute to the authors' view of biological invasions.
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Guiding deployment of resistance in cereals using evolutionary principles.

TL;DR: It is argued that continuing advances in molecular marker technologies provide major opportunities to deliberately design deployment strategies in cereals that can take advantage of the evolutionary pressures faced by target pathogens.
References
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BookDOI

Evolution in Changing Environments: Some Theoretical Explorations. (MPB-2)

TL;DR: Professor Levins, one of the leading explorers in the field of integrated population biology, considers the mutual interpenetration and joint evolution of organism and environment, occurring on several levels at once.
Journal ArticleDOI

Conceptual issues in local adaptation

TL;DR: This paper advocates multifaceted approaches to the study of local adaptation, and stresses the need for experiments explicitly addressing hypotheses about the role of particular ecological and genetic factors that promote or hinder local adaptation.
Journal ArticleDOI

Climate Warming and Disease Risks for Terrestrial and Marine Biota

TL;DR: To improve the ability to predict epidemics in wild populations, it will be necessary to separate the independent and interactive effects of multiple climate drivers on disease impact.
Book

The Geographic Mosaic of Coevolution

TL;DR: Picking up where his influential The Coevolutionary Process left off, John N. Thompson synthesizes the state of a rapidly developing science that integrates approaches from evolutionary ecology, population genetics, phylogeography, systematics, evolutionary biochemistry and physiology, and molecular biology.
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