AI Article Synopsis

  • The study investigates the coevolution between potato cyst nematodes and wild potatoes in Peru to understand local adaptation, focusing on how host root exudates influence cyst hatching.
  • Results revealed no strong local adaptation in nematodes, but combinations of local nematodes and wild potatoes improved cyst hatching, and hatching rates negatively correlated with geographical distance.
  • The origin of the root exudates significantly impacted hatching, with exudates from southern Peru being more effective, suggesting potential strategies for managing potato diseases.

Article Abstract

Plant-parasite coevolution has generated much interest and studies to understand and manage diseases in agriculture. Such a reciprocal evolutionary process could lead to a pattern of local adaptation between plants and parasites. Based on the phylogeography of each partner, the present study tested the hypothesis of local adaptation between the potato cyst nematode and wild potatoes in Peru. The measured fitness trait was the hatching of cysts which is induced by host root exudates. Using a cross-hatching assay between 13 populations of and root exudates from 12 wild potatoes, our results did not show a strong pattern of local adaptation of the parasite but the sympatric combinations induced better hatching of cysts than allopatric combinations, and there was a negative relationship between the hatching percentage and the geographical distance between nematode populations and wild potatoes. Moreover, a strong effect of the geographic origin of root exudates was found, with root exudates from south of Peru inducing better hatching than root exudates from north of Peru. These results could be useful to develop new biocontrol products or potato cultivars to limit damages caused by .

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7244796PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/ece3.6248DOI Listing

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