Amanda Kyle Gibson, Fabiane M. Mundim, Abbey L. Ramirez, Patricia Timper
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To address this gap, we tested for local adaptation of the biological control bacterium <i>Pasteuria penetrans</i> to the root-knot nematode <i>Meloidogyne arenaria</i>, a global threat to a wide range of crops. We measured the probability and intensity of <i>P. penetrans</i> infection on sympatric and allopatric <i>M. arenaria</i> over the course of 4 years. Our design accounted for variation in adaptation across scales by conducting tests within and across fields, and we isolated the signature of parasite adaptation by comparing parasites collected over the course of the growing season. Our results are largely inconsistent with local adaptation of <i>P. penetrans</i> to <i>M. arenaria</i>: in 3 of 4 years, parasites performed similarly well in sympatric and allopatric combinations. In 1 year, however, infection probability was 28% higher for parasites paired with hosts from their sympatric plot, relative to parasites paired with hosts from other plots within the same field. 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引用次数: 0
摘要
寄生虫的本地适应性一直是寄主-寄生虫相互作用(共)进化研究的一个重点。对野生寄主-寄生虫系统的研究经常发现,与本地同域寄主基因型配对的寄生虫比与异域寄主基因型配对的寄生虫表现更好。相比之下,在生物防治系统中很少有这样的测试来确定生物防治寄生虫是否通常在同域害虫基因型上表现更好。这一知识空白阻碍了生物防治计划的优化设计:强烈的地方适应性可能会主张使用同域寄生虫来实现一致的害虫控制。为了填补这一空白,我们测试了生物防治细菌巴斯德氏菌对根结线虫(Meloidogyne arenaria)的本地适应性,根结线虫是对多种作物的全球性威胁。我们测量了穿心莲巴斯德菌在4年时间里对同域和异域根结线虫的感染概率和强度。我们的设计通过在田块内和田块间进行测试,考虑了不同尺度的适应性差异,并通过比较生长季节中收集的寄生虫,分离出寄生虫适应性的特征。我们的结果在很大程度上与 P. penetrans 对 M. arenaria 的本地适应性不一致:在 4 年中的 3 年,寄生虫在同域和异域组合中的表现类似。但有一年,寄生虫与同域地块宿主配对的感染概率比与同一地块其他地块宿主配对的感染概率高出 28%。这些喜忧参半的结果表明,需要群体遗传数据来描述该系统中基因流动和遗传分化的规模。总之,我们的研究结果并不能有力地支持利用当地田间的穿心莲寄生虫来加强对褐飞虱的生物防治。
Do biological control agents adapt to local pest genotypes? A multiyear test across geographic scales
Parasite local adaptation has been a major focus of (co)evolutionary research on host–parasite interactions. Studies of wild host–parasite systems frequently find that parasites paired with local, sympatric host genotypes perform better than parasites paired with allopatric host genotypes. In contrast, there are few such tests in biological control systems to establish whether biological control parasites commonly perform better on sympatric pest genotypes. This knowledge gap prevents the optimal design of biological control programs: strong local adaptation could argue for the use of sympatric parasites to achieve consistent pest control. To address this gap, we tested for local adaptation of the biological control bacterium Pasteuria penetrans to the root-knot nematode Meloidogyne arenaria, a global threat to a wide range of crops. We measured the probability and intensity of P. penetrans infection on sympatric and allopatric M. arenaria over the course of 4 years. Our design accounted for variation in adaptation across scales by conducting tests within and across fields, and we isolated the signature of parasite adaptation by comparing parasites collected over the course of the growing season. Our results are largely inconsistent with local adaptation of P. penetrans to M. arenaria: in 3 of 4 years, parasites performed similarly well in sympatric and allopatric combinations. In 1 year, however, infection probability was 28% higher for parasites paired with hosts from their sympatric plot, relative to parasites paired with hosts from other plots within the same field. These mixed results argue for population genetic data to characterize the scale of gene flow and genetic divergence in this system. Overall, our findings do not provide strong support for using P. penetrans from local fields to enhance biological control of Meloidogyne.
期刊介绍:
Evolutionary Applications is a fully peer reviewed open access journal. It publishes papers that utilize concepts from evolutionary biology to address biological questions of health, social and economic relevance. Papers are expected to employ evolutionary concepts or methods to make contributions to areas such as (but not limited to): medicine, agriculture, forestry, exploitation and management (fisheries and wildlife), aquaculture, conservation biology, environmental sciences (including climate change and invasion biology), microbiology, and toxicology. All taxonomic groups are covered from microbes, fungi, plants and animals. In order to better serve the community, we also now strongly encourage submissions of papers making use of modern molecular and genetic methods (population and functional genomics, transcriptomics, proteomics, epigenetics, quantitative genetics, association and linkage mapping) to address important questions in any of these disciplines and in an applied evolutionary framework. Theoretical, empirical, synthesis or perspective papers are welcome.