Differential Impacts of Virus Diversity on Biomass Production of a Native and an Exotic Grass Host.

Pathogens are common and diverse in natural communities and have been implicated in the success of host invasions. Yet few studies have experimentally measured how pathogens impact native versus exotic hosts, particularly when individual hosts are simultaneously coinfected by diverse pathogens. To e...

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Main Authors: Erin A Mordecai, Madeleine Hindenlang, Charles E Mitchell
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2015-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0134355
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spelling doaj-dbdb94f01dc14cda9962a04b515ec76f2021-03-03T20:00:18ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032015-01-01107e013435510.1371/journal.pone.0134355Differential Impacts of Virus Diversity on Biomass Production of a Native and an Exotic Grass Host.Erin A MordecaiMadeleine HindenlangCharles E MitchellPathogens are common and diverse in natural communities and have been implicated in the success of host invasions. Yet few studies have experimentally measured how pathogens impact native versus exotic hosts, particularly when individual hosts are simultaneously coinfected by diverse pathogens. To estimate effects of interactions among multiple pathogens within host individuals on both transmission of pathogens and fitness consequences for hosts, we conducted a greenhouse experiment using California grassland species: the native perennial grass Nassella (Stipa) pulchra, the exotic annual grass Bromus hordeaceus, and three virus species, Barley yellow dwarf virus-PAV, Barley yellow dwarf virus-MAV, and Cereal yellow dwarf virus-RPV. In terms of virus transmission, the native host was less susceptible than the exotic host to MAV. Coinfection of PAV and MAV did not occur in any of the 157 co-inoculated native host plants. In the exotic host, PAV infection most strongly reduced root and shoot biomass, and coinfections that included PAV severely reduced biomass. Infection with single or multiple viruses did not affect biomass in the native host. However, in this species the most potentially pathogenic coinfections (PAV + MAV and PAV + MAV + RPV) did not occur. Together, these results suggest that interactions among multiple pathogens can have important consequences for host health, which may not be predictable from interactions between hosts and individual pathogens. This work addresses a key empirical gap in understanding the impact of multiple generalist pathogens on competing host species, with potential implications for population and community dynamics of native and exotic species. It also demonstrates how pathogens with relatively mild impacts independently can more substantially reduce host performance in coinfection.https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0134355
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Erin A Mordecai
Madeleine Hindenlang
Charles E Mitchell
spellingShingle Erin A Mordecai
Madeleine Hindenlang
Charles E Mitchell
Differential Impacts of Virus Diversity on Biomass Production of a Native and an Exotic Grass Host.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Erin A Mordecai
Madeleine Hindenlang
Charles E Mitchell
author_sort Erin A Mordecai
title Differential Impacts of Virus Diversity on Biomass Production of a Native and an Exotic Grass Host.
title_short Differential Impacts of Virus Diversity on Biomass Production of a Native and an Exotic Grass Host.
title_full Differential Impacts of Virus Diversity on Biomass Production of a Native and an Exotic Grass Host.
title_fullStr Differential Impacts of Virus Diversity on Biomass Production of a Native and an Exotic Grass Host.
title_full_unstemmed Differential Impacts of Virus Diversity on Biomass Production of a Native and an Exotic Grass Host.
title_sort differential impacts of virus diversity on biomass production of a native and an exotic grass host.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2015-01-01
description Pathogens are common and diverse in natural communities and have been implicated in the success of host invasions. Yet few studies have experimentally measured how pathogens impact native versus exotic hosts, particularly when individual hosts are simultaneously coinfected by diverse pathogens. To estimate effects of interactions among multiple pathogens within host individuals on both transmission of pathogens and fitness consequences for hosts, we conducted a greenhouse experiment using California grassland species: the native perennial grass Nassella (Stipa) pulchra, the exotic annual grass Bromus hordeaceus, and three virus species, Barley yellow dwarf virus-PAV, Barley yellow dwarf virus-MAV, and Cereal yellow dwarf virus-RPV. In terms of virus transmission, the native host was less susceptible than the exotic host to MAV. Coinfection of PAV and MAV did not occur in any of the 157 co-inoculated native host plants. In the exotic host, PAV infection most strongly reduced root and shoot biomass, and coinfections that included PAV severely reduced biomass. Infection with single or multiple viruses did not affect biomass in the native host. However, in this species the most potentially pathogenic coinfections (PAV + MAV and PAV + MAV + RPV) did not occur. Together, these results suggest that interactions among multiple pathogens can have important consequences for host health, which may not be predictable from interactions between hosts and individual pathogens. This work addresses a key empirical gap in understanding the impact of multiple generalist pathogens on competing host species, with potential implications for population and community dynamics of native and exotic species. It also demonstrates how pathogens with relatively mild impacts independently can more substantially reduce host performance in coinfection.
url https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0134355
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