Model analysis for plant disease dynamics co-mediated by herbivory and herbivore-borne phytopathogens

Plants are subject to diseases caused by pathogens, many of which are transmitted by herbivorous arthropod vectors. To understand plant disease dynamics, we studied a minimum hybrid model combining consumer–resource (herbivore–plant) and susceptible–infected models, in which the disease is transmitt...

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Published inBiology letters (2005) Vol. 8; no. 4; pp. 685 - 688
Main Authors Nakazawa, Takefumi, Yamanaka, Takehiko, Urano, Satoru
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published England The Royal Society 23.08.2012
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Summary:Plants are subject to diseases caused by pathogens, many of which are transmitted by herbivorous arthropod vectors. To understand plant disease dynamics, we studied a minimum hybrid model combining consumer–resource (herbivore–plant) and susceptible–infected models, in which the disease is transmitted bi-directionally between the consumer and the resource from the infected to susceptible classes. Model analysis showed that: (i) the disease is more likely to persist when the herbivore feeds on the susceptible plants rather than the infected plants, and (ii) alternative stable states can exist in which the system converges to either a disease-free or an endemic state, depending on the initial conditions. The second finding is particularly important because it suggests that the disease may persist once established, even though the initial prevalence is low (i.e. the R0 rule does not always hold). This situation is likely to occur when the infection improves the plant nutritive quality, and the herbivore preferentially feeds on the infected resource (i.e. indirect vector–pathogen mutualism). Our results highlight the importance of the eco-epidemiological perspective that integration of tripartite interactions among host plant, plant pathogen and herbivore vector is crucial for the successful control of plant diseases.
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ISSN:1744-9561
1744-957X
1744-957X
DOI:10.1098/rsbl.2012.0049