Literature DB >> 26912046

Plant characteristics associated with widespread variation in eelgrass wasting disease.

Maya L Groner1, Colleen A Burge, Catherine J S Kim, Erin Rees, Kathryn L Van Alstyne, Sylvia Yang, Sandy Wyllie-Echeverria, C Drew Harvell.   

Abstract

Seagrasses are ecosystem engineers of essential marine habitat. Their populations are rapidly declining worldwide. One potential cause of seagrass population declines is wasting disease, which is caused by opportunistic pathogens in the genus Labyrinthula. While infection with these pathogens is common in seagrasses, theory suggests that disease only occurs when environmental stressors cause immunosuppression of the host. Recent evidence suggests that host factors may also contribute to disease caused by opportunistic pathogens. In order to quantify patterns of disease, identify risk factors, and investigate responses to infection, we surveyed shoot density, shoot length, epiphyte load, production of plant defenses (phenols), and wasting disease prevalence in eelgrass Zostera marina across 11 sites in the central Salish Sea (Washington state, USA), a region where both wasting disease and eelgrass declines have been documented. Wasting disease was diagnosed by the presence of necrotic lesions, and Labyrinthula cells were identified with histology. Disease prevalence among sites varied from 6 to 79%. The probability of a shoot being diseased was higher in longer shoots, in patches of higher shoot density, and in shoots with higher levels of biofouling from epiphytes. Phenolic concentration was higher in diseased leaves. We hypothesize that this results from the induction of phenols during infection. Additional research is needed to evaluate whether phenols are an adaptive defense against Labyrinthula infection. The high site-level variation in disease prevalence emphasizes the potential for wasting disease to be causing some of the observed decline in eelgrass beds.

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Year:  2016        PMID: 26912046     DOI: 10.3354/dao02962

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Dis Aquat Organ        ISSN: 0177-5103            Impact factor:   1.802


  3 in total

1.  Are migratory waterfowl vectors of seagrass pathogens?

Authors:  Damian Michael Menning; David Hume Ward; Sandy Wyllie-Echeverria; George Kevin Sage; Megan Cathleen Gravley; Hunter Alexander Gravley; Sandra Looman Talbot
Journal:  Ecol Evol       Date:  2020-02-04       Impact factor: 2.912

2.  Predictable Changes in Eelgrass Microbiomes with Increasing Wasting Disease Prevalence across 23° Latitude in the Northeastern Pacific.

Authors:  Deanna S Beatty; Lillian R Aoki; Brendan Rappazzo; Chelsea Bergman; Lia K Domke; J Emmett Duffy; Katie Dubois; Ginny L Eckert; Carla Gomes; Olivia J Graham; Leah Harper; C Drew Harvell; Timothy L Hawthorne; Margot Hessing-Lewis; Kevin Hovel; Zachary L Monteith; Ryan S Mueller; Angeleen M Olson; Carolyn Prentice; Fiona Tomas; Bo Yang; John J Stachowicz
Journal:  mSystems       Date:  2022-07-20       Impact factor: 7.324

Review 3.  Not in your usual Top 10: protists that infect plants and algae.

Authors:  Arne Schwelm; Julia Badstöber; Simon Bulman; Nicolas Desoignies; Mohammad Etemadi; Richard E Falloon; Claire M M Gachon; Anne Legreve; Julius Lukeš; Ueli Merz; Anna Nenarokova; Martina Strittmatter; Brooke K Sullivan; Sigrid Neuhauser
Journal:  Mol Plant Pathol       Date:  2017-10-11       Impact factor: 5.663

  3 in total

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