The impact of plant enemies shows a phylogenetic signal

The host ranges of plant pathogens and herbivores are phylogenetically constrained, so that closely related plant species are more likely to share pests and pathogens. Here we conducted a reanalysis of data from published experimental studies to test whether the severity of host-enemy interactions f...

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Veröffentlicht in:PloS one 2015-04, Vol.10 (4), p.e0123758-e0123758
Hauptverfasser: Gilbert, Gregory S, Briggs, Heather M, Magarey, Roger
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Briggs, Heather M
Magarey, Roger
description The host ranges of plant pathogens and herbivores are phylogenetically constrained, so that closely related plant species are more likely to share pests and pathogens. Here we conducted a reanalysis of data from published experimental studies to test whether the severity of host-enemy interactions follows a similar phylogenetic signal. The impact of herbivores and pathogens on their host plants declined steadily with phylogenetic distance from the most severely affected focal hosts. The steepness of this phylogenetic signal was similar to that previously measured for binary-response host ranges. Enemy behavior and development showed similar, but weaker phylogenetic signal, with oviposition and growth rates declining with evolutionary distance from optimal hosts. Phylogenetic distance is an informative surrogate for estimating the likely impacts of a pest or pathogen on potential plant hosts, and may be particularly useful in early assessing risk from emergent plant pests, where critical decisions must be made with incomplete host records.
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subjects Environmental studies
Evolution
Flowers & plants
Herbivores
Host plants
Host-Pathogen Interactions
Oviposition
Parasites
Pathogens
Pests
Phylogenetics
Phylogeny
Plant species
Plants - microbiology
Plants - parasitology
Regression Analysis
Science
Slopes
Studies
title The impact of plant enemies shows a phylogenetic signal
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