“…Reviews have presented different emphases while remaining quite general without too much specific information on individual crop diseases; most have covered crops and other managed plant populations rather than the wild plant populations and communities covered in this review. Aspects covered, selective not exhaustive, over the last 15 years on climate change impacts on plant disease include scale of analysis (Garrett et al, 2006), pathogen evolution and disease management (Burdon & Thrall, 2008), pathogen emergence and new encounters (Jones, 2009), implications for landscape management (Pautasso et al, 2010), complexity of interactions (Garrett et al, 2011), food security (Chakraborty & Newton, 2011), plant defence (Newton et al, 2012), overview of opinions and trends (Pautasso et al, 2012), life history trade-offs (Laine & Barrès, 2013), atypical drought (Morley & Lewis, 2014), inadequacies of the disease triangle concept (Garbelotto & Gonthier, 2017), unpredictability of emergence of pathogens (Corredor-Moreno & Saunders, 2020), and plant-microbe interactions more generally (Rudgers et al, 2020). In a recent book, Burdon and Laine (2019) provide a comprehensive overview of the evolutionary dynamics of plant-pathogen interactions, covering climate-related changes in disease occurrence and geographical range, but also pointing out the implications for evolutionary and coevolutionary processes, considered to be a fertile area for future study.…”