Arranging the bouquet of disease: floral traits and the transmission of plant and animal pathogens

Several floral microbes are known to be pathogenic to plants or floral visitors such as pollinators. Despite the ecological and economic importance of pathogens deposited in flowers, we often lack a basic understanding of how floral traits influence disease transmission. Here, we provide the first s...

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Veröffentlicht in:Ecology letters 2014-05, Vol.17 (5), p.624-636
Hauptverfasser: McArt, Scott H, Koch, Hauke, Irwin, Rebecca E, Adler, Lynn S, Gurevitch, Jessica
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container_end_page 636
container_issue 5
container_start_page 624
container_title Ecology letters
container_volume 17
creator McArt, Scott H
Koch, Hauke
Irwin, Rebecca E
Adler, Lynn S
Gurevitch, Jessica
description Several floral microbes are known to be pathogenic to plants or floral visitors such as pollinators. Despite the ecological and economic importance of pathogens deposited in flowers, we often lack a basic understanding of how floral traits influence disease transmission. Here, we provide the first systematic review regarding how floral traits attract vectors (for plant pathogens) or hosts (for animal pathogens), mediate disease establishment and evolve under complex interactions with plant mutualists that can be vectors for microbial antagonists. Attraction of floral visitors is influenced by numerous phenological, morphological and chemical traits, and several plant pathogens manipulate floral traits to attract vectors. There is rapidly growing interest in how floral secondary compounds and antimicrobial enzymes influence disease establishment in plant hosts. Similarly, new research suggests that consumption of floral secondary compounds can reduce pathogen loads in animal pollinators. Given recent concerns about pollinator declines caused in part by pathogens, the role of floral traits in mediating pathogen transmission is a key area for further research. We conclude by discussing important implications of floral transmission of pathogens for agriculture, conservation and human health, suggesting promising avenues for future research in both basic and applied biology.
doi_str_mv 10.1111/ele.12257
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Despite the ecological and economic importance of pathogens deposited in flowers, we often lack a basic understanding of how floral traits influence disease transmission. Here, we provide the first systematic review regarding how floral traits attract vectors (for plant pathogens) or hosts (for animal pathogens), mediate disease establishment and evolve under complex interactions with plant mutualists that can be vectors for microbial antagonists. Attraction of floral visitors is influenced by numerous phenological, morphological and chemical traits, and several plant pathogens manipulate floral traits to attract vectors. There is rapidly growing interest in how floral secondary compounds and antimicrobial enzymes influence disease establishment in plant hosts. Similarly, new research suggests that consumption of floral secondary compounds can reduce pathogen loads in animal pollinators. 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Given recent concerns about pollinator declines caused in part by pathogens, the role of floral traits in mediating pathogen transmission is a key area for further research. We conclude by discussing important implications of floral transmission of pathogens for agriculture, conservation and human health, suggesting promising avenues for future research in both basic and applied biology.</abstract><cop>Oxford</cop><pub>Blackwell Publishing Ltd</pub><pmid>24528408</pmid><doi>10.1111/ele.12257</doi><tpages>13</tpages><oa>free_for_read</oa></addata></record>
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subjects Animal and plant ecology
Animal Diseases - microbiology
Animal Diseases - transmission
Animal Diseases - virology
animal pathogens
Animal, plant and microbial ecology
Animals
antagonists
antimicrobial agents
Autoecology
Bacteria
Bacterial Physiological Phenomena
Biological and medical sciences
Disease transmission
Disease Vectors
economics
Enzymes
flowers
Flowers - microbiology
Flowers - physiology
Fundamental and applied biological sciences. Psychology
Fungi - physiology
fungus
General aspects
host
hosts
human health
Microbiology
microorganisms
Plant Diseases
Plant ecology
Plant Nectar
plant pathogens
Plant pathology
plant-animal interactions
Plants - microbiology
Plants - virology
Plants and fungi
pollinator decline
pollinators
Protozoa
protozoan
Replicative cycle, interference, host-virus relations, pathogenicity, miscellaneous strains
systematic review
vector
Virology
virus
title Arranging the bouquet of disease: floral traits and the transmission of plant and animal pathogens
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