Assessing the phylogenetic host breadth of millet pathogens and its implication for disease spillover

Abstract 1. Increasing agriculture intensification has led to dramatically improved crop yields; however, this shift in agricultural practice has been accompanied by increasing threats from new and emerging plant pathogens. While the pathogens associated with crop species are often well studied, esp...

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Main Authors: Edward Ssebuliba, T. Jonathan Davies
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Wiley 2021-01-01
Series:Ecological Solutions and Evidence
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1002/2688-8319.12040
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spelling doaj-3f8b8d2e9d674dd291fdfc83117c5e6b2021-09-16T08:20:45ZengWileyEcological Solutions and Evidence2688-83192021-01-0121n/an/a10.1002/2688-8319.12040Assessing the phylogenetic host breadth of millet pathogens and its implication for disease spilloverEdward Ssebuliba0T. Jonathan Davies1Department of Botany University of British Columbia Vancouver BC CanadaDepartment of Botany University of British Columbia Vancouver BC CanadaAbstract 1. Increasing agriculture intensification has led to dramatically improved crop yields; however, this shift in agricultural practice has been accompanied by increasing threats from new and emerging plant pathogens. While the pathogens associated with crop species are often well studied, especially within North America and Europe, less is known about pathogen pressures on crops elsewhere, and our ability to predict the emergence of novel pathogens is limited. Here, we model phylogenetic constraints on the distribution of pathogens of millet – one of the most important crops in Africa. 2. We conducted a literature review to compile a database of common millet pathogens and the non‐millet host crops associated with each. We then characterized the phylogenetic host range for each pathogen using measures of mean pairwise distance (MPD) and mean nearest taxon distance (MNTD) separating crop hosts. 3. We detected robust phylogenetic clustering for both metrics of phylogenetic dispersion (MPD and MNTD). Evidence for phylogenetic clustering tended to be stronger (more negative standard effect sizes) and more variable for MPD than for MNTD. 4. Although patterns for individual pathogens were variable, we did not find significant differences in phylogenetic dispersion of hosts among pathogen types (bacteria, viruses and fungi). However, in several cases, we observed evidence of phylogenetic clustering in evolutionarily distant host clades, a possible signal of occasional large phylogenetic host jumps. 5. We show that pathogens cluster on closely related hosts, and it is thus likely that closely related millets also share similar pathogen communities. On average, the probability of a pathogen host shift may, therefore, be predicted by the phylogenetic relatedness between host species. However, host shifts between distantly related hosts are not infrequent. This finding has relevance not only for the design of agronomic systems to reduce disease spillover but also for biological control agents risk analysis, quarantine regulations in international trade and our understanding of the distribution and abundance of plants in natural systems.https://doi.org/10.1002/2688-8319.12040disease spillovermean nearest taxon distancemean pairwise distancemillet pathogenspathogen host rangephylogenetic distribution
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Edward Ssebuliba
T. Jonathan Davies
spellingShingle Edward Ssebuliba
T. Jonathan Davies
Assessing the phylogenetic host breadth of millet pathogens and its implication for disease spillover
Ecological Solutions and Evidence
disease spillover
mean nearest taxon distance
mean pairwise distance
millet pathogens
pathogen host range
phylogenetic distribution
author_facet Edward Ssebuliba
T. Jonathan Davies
author_sort Edward Ssebuliba
title Assessing the phylogenetic host breadth of millet pathogens and its implication for disease spillover
title_short Assessing the phylogenetic host breadth of millet pathogens and its implication for disease spillover
title_full Assessing the phylogenetic host breadth of millet pathogens and its implication for disease spillover
title_fullStr Assessing the phylogenetic host breadth of millet pathogens and its implication for disease spillover
title_full_unstemmed Assessing the phylogenetic host breadth of millet pathogens and its implication for disease spillover
title_sort assessing the phylogenetic host breadth of millet pathogens and its implication for disease spillover
publisher Wiley
series Ecological Solutions and Evidence
issn 2688-8319
publishDate 2021-01-01
description Abstract 1. Increasing agriculture intensification has led to dramatically improved crop yields; however, this shift in agricultural practice has been accompanied by increasing threats from new and emerging plant pathogens. While the pathogens associated with crop species are often well studied, especially within North America and Europe, less is known about pathogen pressures on crops elsewhere, and our ability to predict the emergence of novel pathogens is limited. Here, we model phylogenetic constraints on the distribution of pathogens of millet – one of the most important crops in Africa. 2. We conducted a literature review to compile a database of common millet pathogens and the non‐millet host crops associated with each. We then characterized the phylogenetic host range for each pathogen using measures of mean pairwise distance (MPD) and mean nearest taxon distance (MNTD) separating crop hosts. 3. We detected robust phylogenetic clustering for both metrics of phylogenetic dispersion (MPD and MNTD). Evidence for phylogenetic clustering tended to be stronger (more negative standard effect sizes) and more variable for MPD than for MNTD. 4. Although patterns for individual pathogens were variable, we did not find significant differences in phylogenetic dispersion of hosts among pathogen types (bacteria, viruses and fungi). However, in several cases, we observed evidence of phylogenetic clustering in evolutionarily distant host clades, a possible signal of occasional large phylogenetic host jumps. 5. We show that pathogens cluster on closely related hosts, and it is thus likely that closely related millets also share similar pathogen communities. On average, the probability of a pathogen host shift may, therefore, be predicted by the phylogenetic relatedness between host species. However, host shifts between distantly related hosts are not infrequent. This finding has relevance not only for the design of agronomic systems to reduce disease spillover but also for biological control agents risk analysis, quarantine regulations in international trade and our understanding of the distribution and abundance of plants in natural systems.
topic disease spillover
mean nearest taxon distance
mean pairwise distance
millet pathogens
pathogen host range
phylogenetic distribution
url https://doi.org/10.1002/2688-8319.12040
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