School of Forest, Fisheries, and Geomatics Sciences, University of Florida, Gainesville, FL, 32611.
Department of Entomology and Plant Pathology, Mountain Research Station, North Carolina State University, Waynesville, NC, 28786.
Am J Bot. 2024 Feb;111(2):e16286. doi: 10.1002/ajb2.16286. Epub 2024 Feb 17.
In frequently burned southeastern USA pine-grassland communities, wiregrass (Aristida stricta and A. beyrichiana) are dominant bunchgrasses whose flowers are infected during flowering by a smut fungus (Langdonia walkerae). We hypothesized that because prescribed fire timing affects wiregrass flowering patterns, it could affect smut incidence (occurrence of smut on plants) and severity of infection in inflorescences and spikelets. Because soil order could influence plant susceptibility, we hypothesized that these patterns would differ between soil orders. We hypothesized differences between species as representative of geographic variation in this ecosystem.
We surveyed the incidence and severity of L. walkerae in wiregrass populations (85 populations at 14 sites) that had been prescription burned at different times during the previous year. We used binomial regressions to test whether incidence and severity differed by burn day, soil order, or species, with site as a random effect.
Fires that occurred in the winter were associated with significantly lower incidence than fires later in the year (as the months progressed into summer). Plants growing on Spodosol soils were significantly less likely to be infected than those on other soils. More variation in incidence, however, was explained by site, suggesting that site-specific characteristics were important. Smut severity in inflorescences and spikelets was greater overall in populations of A. stricta than in southern populations (A. beyrichiana).
Our findings indicate that fire timing and soil order affect L. walkerae incidence in wiregrass plants, but neither appears to be associated with greater severity. Patterns of smut infection are related to site history and geographic variation.
在美国东南部经常被火烧的松树草原群落中,雀稗(Aristida stricta 和 A. beyrichiana)是优势丛生草,其花朵在开花期间被一种黑粉菌(Langdonia walkerae)感染。我们假设,由于规定的火灾时间会影响雀稗的开花模式,它可能会影响黑粉菌的发病率(植物上黑粉菌的出现)和花序及小穗的感染严重程度。由于土壤顺序可能会影响植物的易感性,我们假设这些模式在不同的土壤顺序之间会有所不同。我们假设物种之间的差异代表了该生态系统中地理变异的代表性。
我们调查了在前一年的不同时间进行规定火烧的雀稗种群(14 个地点的 85 个种群)中 L. walkerae 的发病率和严重程度。我们使用二项式回归来检验发病率和严重程度是否因火烧日、土壤顺序或物种的不同而不同,其中地点作为随机效应。
冬季发生的火灾与当年晚些时候(随着月份进入夏季)发生的火灾相比,发病率明显较低。在 Spodosol 土壤上生长的植物比在其他土壤上的植物感染的可能性显著降低。然而,发病率的变化更多地由地点解释,这表明地点的具体特征很重要。与南部种群(A. beyrichiana)相比,A. stricta 种群的花序和小穗的黑粉病严重程度总体上更高。
我们的研究结果表明,火灾时间和土壤顺序会影响雀稗植物中的 L. walkerae 发病率,但两者似乎都与更高的严重程度无关。黑粉病感染模式与地点历史和地理变异有关。