4.3 Article

Foliar pathogens of Populus angustifolia are consistent with a hypothesis of Beringian migration into North America

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FUNGAL BIOLOGY
卷 116, 期 7, 页码 792-801

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ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.funbio.2012.04.012

关键词

Fungal biogeography; Mycosphaerellaceae; Pucciniales; Salicaceae; Populus trichocarpa

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资金

  1. Department of Energy Graduate Research Environmental Fellowship Program
  2. Stanford University Field Studies Program
  3. Heinz Environmental Fellowship
  4. Louisiana Board of Regents and USDA-APHIS

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Populus angustifolia, the narrowleaf cottonwood, is considered one of two native species of Populus section Tacamahaca restricted to western North America. Efforts to construct a definitive phylogeny of Populus spp. are complicated by ancient hybridization, but some phylogenetic analyses suggest P. angustifolia is more closely related to Asian congeners than to Populus trichocarpa, the other species of Populus section Tacamahaca in western North America. Because hosts and their obligate symbionts can display parallel phylogeographic patterns, we evaluated the possibility of a Beringian migration into North America by an Asian ancestor of P. angustifolia by determining the distributions, host preferences, and, in some cases, closest phylogenetic relatives of fungal leaf pathogens of P. angustifolia. Phyllactinia populi, a common foliar pathogen on Populus spp. in Asia but unknown on P. trichocarpa, was found on P. angustifolia in multiple sites. Mycosphaerella angustifoliorum, also unknown on P. trichocarpa, was commonly. collected on P. angustifolia. Conversely, many common foliar pathogens of P. trichocarpa in western North America were not found on P. angustifolia; only Melampsoraxcolumbiana and Drepanopeziza populi were common to both Populus species. Phylogenetic analyses revealed that M. angustifoliorum was not part of the diversification of Mycosphaerella on Populus that includes all other Mycosphaerella species on Populus in North America: Mycosphaerella populicola, Mycosphaerella populorum, M. sp. 1, and M. sp. 2. The latter two undescribed species represent a newly discovered diversification of M. populorum in western North America. Overall, the leaf pathogen community of P. angustifolia is consistent with a Beringian migration into North America by the ancestor of P. angustifolia. (C) 2012 The British Mycological Society. Published by Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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