Diversity of woody-host infecting Phytophthora species in public parks and botanic gardens as revealed by metabarcoding, and opportunities for mitigation through best practice

S. Green, C. Riddell, Debbie Frederickson-Matika, A. Armstrong, M. Elliot, J. Forster, P. Hedley, Jenny A. Morris, P. Thorpe, D. Cooke, P. Sharp, L. Pritchard
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引用次数: 4

Abstract

The diversity of Phytophthora species in soils collected from 14 highly disturbed sites in northern Britain, including botanic gardens, arboreta, public parks and other amenity woodland sites, was analysed using a molecular technique known as DNA metabarcoding. This technique enables the identification of multiple species present in a single environmental sample based on a DNA ‘barcode’ unique to each species. The genus Phytophthora was targeted in this study due to its increasing impact on Britain’s forests and woodlands over thelast 20 years. The introduction and spread of new Phytophthora species into Britain has been strongly associated with the movement of traded containerised plants, with a number of Phytophthora outbreaks reported on host trees located in public gardens and parks that had recently undergone planting or landscape regeneration schemes. This study was undertaken to assess the extent to which these highly disturbed sites with extensive planting regimes act as harbours for woody-host infecting Phytophthora species. A total of 23 Phytophthora species, the majority of which are known to be pathogens of woody hosts, were detected across the 14 sites sampled. These included four quarantine-regulated pathogens and four species notpreviously recorded in Britain. Also detected were three as-yet undescribed Phytophthora species and nine oomycete sequences with no clear match to any known genus. There was no effect of geographical location, elevation, underlying soil type, host family or host health status on the Phytophthora assemblages at each site, suggesting that the Phytophthora communities detected are likely to comprise introduced species associated with planting programmes. P. austrocedri and P. pseudosyringae were two of the most abundant Phytophthoraspecies detected, both of which cause serious damage to trees and are regarded as fairly recent introductions to Britain. The practical implications of the findings in terms of mitigating Phytophthora introduction, spread and impact at botanic gardens, arboreta and urban parks are discussed.
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元条形码揭示的公园和植物园中感染疫霉的木质寄主的多样性,以及通过最佳实践缓解疫霉的机会
从英国北部14个高度受干扰的地点收集土壤中的疫霉菌物种的多样性,包括植物园,树木,公园和其他舒适的林地地点,使用一种称为DNA元条形码的分子技术进行了分析。这项技术可以根据每个物种独特的DNA“条形码”识别单个环境样本中存在的多个物种。疫霉属之所以成为这项研究的目标,是因为它在过去20年里对英国的森林和林地的影响越来越大。新疫霉物种的引进和传播进入英国与交易的集装箱植物的运动密切相关,在最近经历了种植或景观再生计划的公共花园和公园的宿主树木上报道了许多疫霉爆发。本研究旨在评估这些具有广泛种植制度的高度受干扰的地点作为感染疫霉的木质寄主的避风港的程度。在14个采样点共检测到23种疫霉,其中大多数已知是木质寄主的病原体。其中包括四种检疫管制的病原体和四种在英国以前没有记录的物种。还检测到3个尚未描述的疫霉菌种和9个与任何已知属没有明确匹配的卵菌序列。地理位置、海拔、下层土壤类型、寄主家族或寄主健康状况对每个地点疫霉菌组合没有影响,这表明检测到的疫霉菌群落可能包括与种植计划有关的引进物种。austrocedri和pseudosyringae是检测到的数量最多的两种植物,这两种植物都对树木造成严重损害,被认为是最近引进英国的。讨论了研究结果对减轻疫霉在植物园、植物园和城市公园的传入、传播和影响的实际意义。
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