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Temporal and Spatial Changes in a Metapopulation of the Rust Pathogen Triphragmium Ulmariae and its Host, Filipendula Ulmaria

97

Citations

21

References

1995

Year

Abstract

1 The numerical dynamics of a rust disease caused by the pathogen Triphragmium ulmariae was studied in a metapopulation of 129 discrete populations of the host plant Filipendula ulmaria. 2 Over the four years 1990-1993, 37% of the populations were consistently infected by the pathogen while 43% were always healthy. In the remaining 20% of populations, the presence of disease fluctuated from year-to-year. 3 In each of the four years the incidence of disease was strongly positively correlated with the logarithm of host population size (P < 0.001). Disease incidence was also weakly affected by the type of shore on which host populations grew but not by their degree of exposure. 4 The severity of disease occurring in infected populations was weakly positively correlated with the logarithm of population size (P < 0.05). However, the relationship between the density of individuals within populations and disease prevalence showed no density-dependence. 5 The distribution of disease among populations of the metapopulation had a significant spatial component in two of the years, with infected populations being closer together than would be expected by chance.

References

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