Department of Biology, Washington University in St. Louis, St. Louis, Missouri, USA.
Ecology. 2024 Jun;105(6):e4313. doi: 10.1002/ecy.4313. Epub 2024 May 6.
Increased temperatures associated with urbanization (the "urban heat island" effect) have been shown to impact a wide range of traits across diverse taxa. At the same time, climatic conditions vary at fine spatial scales within habitats due to factors including shade from shrubs, trees, and built structures. Patches of shade may function as microclimate refugia that allow species to occur in habitats where high temperatures and/or exposure to ultraviolet radiation would otherwise be prohibitive. However, the importance of shaded microhabitats for interactions between species across urbanized landscapes remains poorly understood. Weedy plants and their foliar pathogens are a tractable system for studying how multiple scales of climatic variation influence infection prevalence. Powdery mildew pathogens are particularly well suited to this work, as these fungi can be visibly diagnosed on leaf surfaces. We studied the effects of shaded microclimates on rates of powdery mildew infection on Plantago host species in (1) "pandemic pivot" surveys in which undergraduate students recorded shade and infection status of thousands of plants along road verges in urban and suburban residential neighborhoods, (2) monthly surveys of plant populations in 22 parks along an urbanization gradient, and (3) a manipulative field experiment directly testing the effects of shade on the growth and transmission of powdery mildew. Together, our field survey results show strong positive effects of shade on mildew infection in wild Plantago populations across urban, suburban, and rural habitats. Our experiment suggests that this relationship is causal, where microclimate conditions associated with shade promote pathogen growth. Overall, infection prevalence increased with urbanization despite a negative association between urbanization and tree cover at the landscape scale. These findings highlight the importance of taking microclimate heterogeneity into account when establishing links between macroclimate or land use context and prevalence of disease.
城市化导致的气温升高(“城市热岛”效应)已被证明会影响不同分类群的广泛特征。与此同时,由于灌木、树木和建筑结构的遮荫等因素,栖息地内的小气候条件在精细的空间尺度上会发生变化。遮荫斑块可能成为微气候避难所,使物种能够在高温和/或暴露在紫外线下会受到限制的栖息地中生存。然而,在城市化景观中,遮荫微生境对物种间相互作用的重要性仍知之甚少。杂草植物及其叶部病原体是研究多个气候变化尺度如何影响感染率的可行系统。白粉病病原体特别适合这项工作,因为这些真菌可以在叶片表面上明显诊断出来。我们研究了遮荫微气候对(1)在城市和郊区居民区的路边进行的“大流行枢轴”调查中,千上万株车前草宿主物种的白粉病感染率的影响,(2)在城市化梯度上的 22 个公园中对植物种群进行的每月调查,以及(3)直接测试遮荫对白粉病生长和传播影响的野外实验。总的来说,我们的实地调查结果表明,在城市、郊区和农村栖息地的野生车前草种群中,遮荫对白粉病感染有强烈的积极影响。我们的实验表明,这种关系是因果关系,与遮荫相关的小气候条件促进了病原体的生长。尽管在景观尺度上城市化与树木覆盖之间存在负相关关系,但总体而言,感染率随着城市化的发展而增加。这些发现强调了在将大气候或土地利用背景与疾病流行率联系起来时,考虑小气候异质性的重要性。