2020
DOI: 10.1016/j.baae.2020.05.002
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Patterns and drivers of fungal disease communities on Arabica coffee along a management gradient

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Cited by 34 publications
(45 citation statements)
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“…We tested for such effect because coffee rust is shown to be reduced in sites in Mexico with abundant Azteca ants, via an intricate interaction between the rust and a hyperparasite ( Lecanicillium lecanii ), that infect both the rust and a scale insect that is tended by the ants (Vandermeer et al 2009). However, while rust hyperparasites are also commonly found in the Ethiopian study system, there are no reports that it attacks any other species than the rust (Zewdie et al 2020). Thus, the only mechanism we can speculate about is that perhaps the ants reduce the abundance of a vector of the rust.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 98%
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“…We tested for such effect because coffee rust is shown to be reduced in sites in Mexico with abundant Azteca ants, via an intricate interaction between the rust and a hyperparasite ( Lecanicillium lecanii ), that infect both the rust and a scale insect that is tended by the ants (Vandermeer et al 2009). However, while rust hyperparasites are also commonly found in the Ethiopian study system, there are no reports that it attacks any other species than the rust (Zewdie et al 2020). Thus, the only mechanism we can speculate about is that perhaps the ants reduce the abundance of a vector of the rust.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 98%
“…The climax vegetation in this region is moist Afromontane forests, but nowadays substantial parts of the landscape are open agricultural fields with small‐scale subsistence agriculture. Coffee is grown under the shade of trees along a wide gradient in management intensity from plantation systems owned by companies, to small‐holder coffee stands located adjacent to their homes, to little‐managed coffee in the forest understory harvested by smallholder farmers living far away from the sites (Zewdie et al 2020). Some of these coffee plants are of wild origin and the Ethiopian forests hold much of the genetic diversity for Arabica coffee (Davis et al 2018).…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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