Migrate or evolve: options for plant pathogens under climate change

被引:109
作者
Chakraborty, Sukumar [1 ]
机构
[1] CSIRO Plant Ind, Queensland Bioscience Precinct, St Lucia, Qld 4067, Australia
关键词
biotrophic pathogens; climate feedback; ecosystem services; forest pathogens; habitat fragmentation; microevolution; necrotrophic pathogens; pathogen fitness; ELEVATED ATMOSPHERIC CO2; STRIPE RUST DISEASE; POTATO LATE BLIGHT; F-SP TRITICI; PHENOTYPIC PLASTICITY; GLOBAL CLIMATE; CHANGE IMPACTS; GENE FLOW; TRANSFORMATIONAL ADAPTATION; EVOLUTIONARY ECOLOGY;
D O I
10.1111/gcb.12205
中图分类号
X176 [生物多样性保护];
学科分类号
090705 ;
摘要
Findings on climate change influence on plant pathogens are often inconsistent and context dependent. Knowledge of pathogens affecting agricultural crops and natural plant communities remains fragmented along disciplinary lines. By broadening the perspective beyond agriculture, this review integrates cross-disciplinary knowledge to show that at scales relevant to climate change, accelerated evolution and changing geographic distribution will be the main implications for pathogens. New races may evolve rapidly under elevated temperature and CO2, as evolutionary forces act on massive pathogen populations boosted by a combination of increased fecundity and infection cycles under favourable microclimate within enlarged canopy. Changing geographic distribution will bring together diverse lineages/genotypes that do not share common ecological niche, potentially increasing pathogen diversity. However, the uncertainty of model predictions and a lack of synthesis of fragmented knowledge remain as major deficiencies in knowledge. The review contends that the failure to consider scale and human intervention through new technology are major sources of uncertainty. Recognizing that improved biophysical models alone will not reduce uncertainty, it proposes a generic framework to increase focus and outlines ways to integrate biophysical elements and technology change with human intervention scenarios to minimize uncertainty. To synthesize knowledge of pathogen biology and life history, the review borrows the concept of fitness' from population biology as a comprehensive measure of pathogen strengths and vulnerabilities, and explores the implications of pathogen mode of nutrition to fitness and its interactions with plants suffering chronic abiotic stress under climate change. Current and future disease management options can then be judged for their ability to impair pathogenic and saprophytic fitness. The review pinpoints improving confidence in model prediction by minimizing uncertainty, developing management strategies to reduce overall pathogen fitness, and finding new sources of data to trawl for climate signatures on pathogens as important challenges for future research.
引用
收藏
页码:1985 / 2000
页数:16
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