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Surprising low diversity of the plant pathogen Phytophthora in Amazonian forests
Author(s) -
Legeay Jean,
Husson Claude,
Boudier Benjamin,
Louisanna Eliane,
Baraloto Christopher,
Schimann Heidy,
Marcais Benoît,
Buée Marc
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
environmental microbiology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.954
H-Index - 188
eISSN - 1462-2920
pISSN - 1462-2912
DOI - 10.1111/1462-2920.15099
Subject(s) - phytophthora , biology , ecology , rainforest , generalist and specialist species , biodiversity , plant community , habitat , botany , species richness
Summary The genus Phytophthora represents a group of plant pathogens with broad global distribution. The majority of them cause the collar and root‐rot of diverse plant species. Little is known about Phytophthora communities in forest ecosystems, especially in the Neotropical forests where natural enemies could maintain the huge plant diversity via negative density dependence. We characterized the diversity of soil‐borne Phytophthora communities in the North French Guiana rainforest and investigated how they are structured by host identity and environmental factors. In this little‐explored habitat, 250 soil cores were sampled from 10 plots hosting 10 different plant families across three forest environments (Terra Firme, Seasonally Flooded and White Sand). Phytophthora diversity was studied using a baiting approach and metabarcoding (High‐Throughput Sequencing) on environmental DNA extracted from both soil samples and baiting‐leaves. These three approaches revealed very similar communities, characterized by an unexpected low diversity of Phytophthora species, with the dominance of two cryptic species close to Phytophthora heveae . As expected, the Phytophthora community composition of the French Guiana rainforest was significantly impacted by the host plant family and environment. However, these plant pathogen communities are very small and are dominated by generalist species, questioning their potential roles as drivers of plant diversity in these Amazonian forests.

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