Croucher Peter J P, Mascheretti Silvia, Garbelotto Matteo
Department of Environmental Science, Policy and Management, University of California, 130 Mulford Hall, Berkeley, CA 94720-3114 USA.
Biol Invasions. 2013;15(10):2281-2297. doi: 10.1007/s10530-013-0453-8. Epub 2013 May 29.
Understanding the migration patterns of invasive organisms is of paramount importance to predict and prevent their further spread. Previous attempts at reconstructing the entire history of the sudden oak death (SOD) epidemic in California were limited by: (1) incomplete sampling; (2) the inability to include infestations caused by a single genotype of the pathogen; (3) collapsing of non-spatially contiguous yet genetically similar samples into large meta-samples that confounded the coalescent analyses. Here, we employ an intensive sampling coverage of 832 isolates of (the causative agent of SOD) from 60 California forests, genotyped at nine microsatellite loci, to reconstruct its invasion. By using age of infestation as a constraint on coalescent analyses, by dividing genetically indistinguishable meta-populations into highly-resolved sets of spatially contiguous populations, and by using Bruvo genetic distances for most analyses, we reconstruct the entire history of the epidemic and convincingly show infected nursery plants are the original source for the entire California epidemic. Results indicate that multiple human-mediated introductions occurred in most counties and that further disease sources were represented by large wild infestations. The study also identifies minor introductions, some of them relatively recent, linked to infected ornamental plants. Finally, using archival isolates collected soon after the discovery of the pathogen in California, we corroborate that the epidemic is likely to have resulted form 3 to 4 core founder individuals evolved from a single genotype. This is probably the most complete reconstruction ever completed for an invasion by an exotic forest pathogen, and the approach here described may be useful for the reconstruction of invasions by any clonally reproducing organism with a relatively limited natural dispersal range.
了解入侵生物的迁移模式对于预测和防止其进一步扩散至关重要。此前试图重建加利福尼亚州橡树猝死病(SOD)疫情的整个历史受到以下因素的限制:(1)采样不完整;(2)无法纳入由单一病原体基因型引起的侵染情况;(3)将非空间相邻但基因相似的样本合并为大型元样本,这混淆了溯祖分析。在此,我们对来自加利福尼亚州60片森林的832株(SOD病原体)分离株进行了密集采样,并在9个微卫星位点进行基因分型,以重建其入侵过程。通过将侵染时间作为溯祖分析的一个约束条件,将基因上无法区分的集合种群划分为空间相邻的、分辨率高的种群集合,并在大多数分析中使用布鲁沃遗传距离,我们重建了疫情的整个历史,并令人信服地表明受感染的苗圃植物是整个加利福尼亚疫情的最初源头。结果表明,大多数县都发生了多次人为介导的引入事件,并且进一步的病源以大型野生侵染为代表。该研究还识别出了一些与受感染观赏植物相关的小规模引入事件,其中一些相对较新。最后,利用在加利福尼亚州发现病原体后不久收集的存档分离株,我们证实该疫情可能源于从单一基因型进化而来的3至4个核心奠基个体。这可能是迄今为止对一种外来森林病原体入侵所完成的最完整的重建,这里所描述的方法可能对重建任何自然扩散范围相对有限的克隆繁殖生物的入侵过程有用。