2021
DOI: 10.1007/s10658-021-02249-0
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Local maladaptation of the anther-smut fungus parasitizing Dianthus carthusianorum

Abstract: Pathogens are generally expected to evolve faster than their hosts and are therefore likely to be locally adapted.However, some pathogens might lag behind in the co-evolutionary arms race because they do not have some of the advantages shared by most other pathogens (e.g., high mutation or recombination rates, short generation time, high dispersal ability). This is the case of Microbotryum fungi that cause the anther smut disease in plants of the family Caryophyllaceae.We investigated the patterns of local ada… Show more

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Cited by 2 publications
(1 citation statement)
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“…However, there is evidence of pathogen genotype specificity in the interactions with some other hosts of anther smut (e.g., S. latifolia and Dianthus carthusianorum ). While we cannot draw a conclusion about M. silenes‐inflatae here, on those other anther‐smut diseases there is often maladaptation of the Microbotryum species for infecting plants from sympatric compared with allopatric host populations (Kaltz et al., 1999 ; Koupilová et al., 2021 ), which indicates a degree of host genotype‐by‐pathogen genotype interaction. Moreover, theoretical study suggests such parasite local maladaptation is particularly unlikely where the host–pathogen coevolution is governed only by quantitatively inherited resistance (Ridenhour & Nuismer, 2007 ).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 82%
“…However, there is evidence of pathogen genotype specificity in the interactions with some other hosts of anther smut (e.g., S. latifolia and Dianthus carthusianorum ). While we cannot draw a conclusion about M. silenes‐inflatae here, on those other anther‐smut diseases there is often maladaptation of the Microbotryum species for infecting plants from sympatric compared with allopatric host populations (Kaltz et al., 1999 ; Koupilová et al., 2021 ), which indicates a degree of host genotype‐by‐pathogen genotype interaction. Moreover, theoretical study suggests such parasite local maladaptation is particularly unlikely where the host–pathogen coevolution is governed only by quantitatively inherited resistance (Ridenhour & Nuismer, 2007 ).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 82%