“…Spore dispersal is essential for a pathogen that completes its life cycle on more than one host, and modelling disease spread of heteroecious pathogens at landscape scales is further complicated by major landscape features such as extreme topography and mountain ranges (Holdenrieder, Pautasso, Weisberg, & Lonsdale, ; Plantegenest, Le May, & Fabre, ). White pine blister rust incidence on white pines is often correlated with the presence and density of close‐proximity alternate hosts, but long‐distance movement of spores may also occur (Buchanan & Kimmey, ; Frank, Geils, Kalkstein, & Thistle, ; Kearns et al., ; Van Arsdel, ). Most long‐distance spread of WPBR likely occurs through movement of thick‐walled aeciospores, which are produced on pines and fairly resistant to desiccation and UV radiation (Frank, Geils et al., ; Kasanen, ; Zambino, ).…”