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Virulence of the invasive ash pathogen Hymenoscyphus fraxineus in old and recently established populations
Authors:V Lygis  S Prospero  D Burokiene  C N Schoebel  D Marciulyniene  G Norkute  D Rigling
Institution:1. Institute of Botany of Nature Research Centre, Vilnius, Lithuania;2. Swiss Federal Institute for Forest, Snow and Landscape Research WSL, Birmensdorf, Switzerland;3. Institute of Forestry, Lithuanian Research Centre for Agriculture and Forestry, Girionys, Kaunas, Lithuania
Abstract:Following its introduction from Asia in the 1990s, the ascomycete Hymenoscyphus fraxineus has caused a severe dieback of Fraxinus excelsior in Europe. In this study, the virulence of 200 H. fraxineus isolates were assessed and compared. These isolates equally represented (i) two geographically distant populations with a different disease history (Switzerland, recently established populations at the epidemic front versus Lithuania, old established populations), and (ii) isolates from two different types of host tissue (necrotic bark lesions as dead‐end tissue versus fallen leaf petioles as primary host tissue). Inoculations conducted on 3‐year‐old F. excelsior seedlings showed that the vast majority of the isolates (98%) were able to induce necrotic bark lesions after 10 months. Although a high variation in virulence was observed among isolates, no significant differences were detected between the older and the epidemic‐front populations. Decline in virulence of populations of invasive organisms is generally assumed with increasing age of epidemics. However, this does not appear to hold true for H. fraxineus. Either the Lithuanian population is still too young (15 to 20 years old) to show a decline in virulence, or the size of the host population may still not be critical for pathogen survival. Given that bark lesions represent an epidemiological dead end and do not benefit the survival of H. fraxineus, a trend towards reduced ‘bark virulence’ of isolates originating from leaf petioles compared to isolates from the bark lesions was expected. However, such a trend was observed neither in old, nor in recently established populations.
Keywords:ash dieback  Chalara fraxinea (Hymenoscyphus pseudoalbidus)  common ash (Fraxinus excelsior)  epidemic front  inoculation  primary and dead‐end host tissue
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