The population biology of fungal invasions

Fungal invasions are increasingly recognized as a significant component of global changes, threatening ecosystem health and damaging food production. Invasive fungi also provide excellent models to evaluate the generality of results based on other eukaryotes. We first consider here the reasons why f...

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Published inMolecular ecology Vol. 24; no. 9; pp. 1969 - 1986
Main Authors Gladieux, P., Feurtey, A., Hood, M. E., Snirc, A., Clavel, J., Dutech, C., Roy, M., Giraud, T.
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published England Blackwell Publishing Ltd 01.05.2015
Wiley
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Summary:Fungal invasions are increasingly recognized as a significant component of global changes, threatening ecosystem health and damaging food production. Invasive fungi also provide excellent models to evaluate the generality of results based on other eukaryotes. We first consider here the reasons why fungal invasions have long been overlooked: they tend to be inconspicuous, and inappropriate methods have been used for species recognition. We then review the information available on the patterns and mechanisms of fungal invasions. We examine the biological features underlying invasion success of certain fungal species. We review population structure analyses, revealing native source populations and strengths of bottlenecks. We highlight the documented ecological and evolutionary changes in invaded regions, including adaptation to temperature, increased virulence, hybridization, shifts to clonality and association with novel hosts. We discuss how the huge census size of most fungi allows adaptation even in bottlenecked, clonal invaders. We also present new analyses of the invasion of the anther‐smut pathogen on white campion in North America, as a case study illustrating how an accurate knowledge of species limits and phylogeography of fungal populations can be used to decipher the origin of invasions. This case study shows that successful invasions can occur even when life history traits are particularly unfavourable to long‐distance dispersal and even with a strong bottleneck. We conclude that fungal invasions are valuable models to contribute to our view of biological invasions, in particular by providing insights into the traits as well as ecological and evolutionary processes allowing successful introductions.
Bibliography:ark:/67375/WNG-JN8TTT1L-J
ERC starting grant GenomeFun - No. 309403
Fig. S1 Population structure of fungus Microbotryum lychnidis-dioicae collected on Silene latifolia (N = 328 individuals), inferred with Structure, for K = 2 to K = 8. Each vertical line represents an individual. Individuals are grouped on the horizontal axis by country.Table S1 Cases of invasive fungi or oomycetes for which data are available on the population genetics of invasion or on the occurrence of genetic changes in introduced regions, such as on the evolution of mode of reproduction, the occurrence of bottlenecks or of hybridization.
ArticleID:MEC13028
National Science Foundation - No. DEB-1115765; FP7-PEOPLE-2010-IOF-No.273086
istex:D2DD3993102B840157E072EACFE6466601922CA0
ANR - No. 07-BDIV-003-Emerfundis; No. 12-ADAP-0009-02-GANDALF
ObjectType-Article-1
SourceType-Scholarly Journals-1
ObjectType-Feature-3
content type line 23
ObjectType-Review-2
ISSN:0962-1083
1365-294X
DOI:10.1111/mec.13028