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Article Dans Une Revue Molecular Ecology Année : 2019

Land use is a determinant of plant pathogen alpha- but not beta-diversity

Résumé

Little is known about the diversity patterns of plant pathogens and how they change with land use at a broad scale. We employed DNA metabarcoding to describe the diversity and composition of putative plant pathogen communities in three substrates (soil, roots, and leaves) across five major land uses at a national scale. Almost all plant pathogen communities (fungi, oomycetes, and bacteria) showed strong responses to land use and substrate type. Land use category could explain up to 24% of the variance in composition between communities. Alpha-diversity (richness) of plant pathogens was consistently lower in natural forests than in agricultural systems. In planted forests, there was also generally low pathogen alpha-diversity in soil and roots, but alpha-diversity in leaves was high compared with most other land uses. In contrast to alpha-diversity, differences in within-land use beta-diversity of plant pathogens (the predictability of plant pathogen communities within land use) were subtle. Our results show that large-scale patterns and distributions of putative plant pathogens can be determined using metabarcoding, allowing some of the first landscape level insights into these critically important communities.
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Dates et versions

hal-02618410 , version 1 (25-05-2020)

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Andreas Makiola, Ian A. Dickie, Robert J. Holdaway, Jamie R. Wood, Kate H. Orwin, et al.. Land use is a determinant of plant pathogen alpha- but not beta-diversity. Molecular Ecology, 2019, 28 (16), pp.3786-3798. ⟨10.1111/mec.15177⟩. ⟨hal-02618410⟩
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