We investigated the interaction of elevated CO2 and/or (Ozone) O3 on the occurrence and severity of aspen leaf rust (Melampsora medusae Thuem. f. sp. tremuloidae) on trembling aspen (Populus tremuloides Michx.). Furthermore, we examined the role of changes in leaf surface properties induced by elevated CO2 and/or O3 in this host–pathogen interaction. Three‐ to five‐fold increases in levels of rust infection index were found in 2 consecutive years following growing‐season‐long exposures with either O3 alone or CO2 + O3 depending on aspen clone. Examination of leaf surface properties (wax appearance, wax amount, wax chemical composition, leaf surface and wettability) suggested significant effects by O3 and CO2 + O3. We conclude that elevated O3 is altering aspen leaf surfaces in such a way that it is likely predisposing the plants to increased infection by aspen leaf rust.
Survey records of spruce budworm (Choristneura fumiferana Clem.) defoliation in Ontario, taken annually since 1941, were analysed using geographic information systems (GIS), spatial statistics, and time-series methods. Cumulative frequency maps indicated that the 41 × 106 ha of Ontario that had been defoliated in at least one year since 1941 could be split into three zones of frequent defoliation separated by two approximately 100 km wide, longitudinally oriented corridors of lower frequency. Analysis of annual records of the total area defoliated showed that the fluctuations in this time series are the result of a basic oscillation of approximately 36 years, which is modified by secondary fluctuations and occasionally by sharp drops. The secondary fluctuations are at least partially due to asynchrony in otherwise remarkably similar long-wave oscillations in the eastern (25.5 × 106 ha) and western (9.6 × 106 ha) zones of frequent defoliation. Analysis of this asynchrony showed that outbreaks in the eastern zone occurred 5 or 6 years before outbreaks in the central (6.6 × 106 ha) and western zones, which were synchronous. These observations contradict previous reports of the large-scale spread of outbreaks from west to east.
The genetic structure of populations of Cronartium ribicola was studied by sampling nine populations from five provinces in eastern Canada and generating DNA profiles using nine random amplified polymorphic DNA markers. Most of the total gene diversity (H(t) = 0.386) was present within populations (H(w) = 0.370), resulting in a low level of genetic differentiation among populations in northeastern North America (F(st) = 0.062). A hierarchical analysis of genetic structure using an analysis of molecular variance (AMOVA) revealed no statistically significant genetic differentiation among provinces or among regions. Yet, genetic differentiation among populations within regions or provinces was small (AMOVA phi(st) = 0.078) but statistically significant (P < 0.001) and was several orders of magnitude larger than differentiation among provinces. This is consistent with a scenario of subpopulations within a metapopulation, in which random drift following migration and new colonization are major evolutionary forces. A phenetic analysis using genetic distances revealed no apparent correlation between genetic distance and the province of origin of the populations. The hypothesis of isolation-by-distance in the eastern populations of C. ribicola was rejected by computing Mantel correlation coefficients between genetic and geographic distance matrices (P > 0.05). These results show that eastern Canadian provinces are part of the same white pine blister rust epidemiological unit. Nursery distribution systems are controlled provincially, with virtually no seedling movement among provinces; therefore, infected nursery material may not play an important role in the dissemination of this disease. Long-distance spore dispersal across provincial boundaries appears to be an epidemiologically important factor for this pathogen.
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