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Data from: A multi-year case study highlighting the influence of hydrological conditions on epidemic dynamics in a natural plant pathosystem

Creators: Duggal, Keenan, Jiranek, JulianaORCID, Machado, Madison, Smith, Peyton, Miller, Ian, Metcalf, Jessica
Year: 2024
DOI: 10.5061/dryad.98sf7m0tc
License: CC0 (Public Domain)
Location: Gunnison Basin, Colorado
Publisher: Dryad
Tags: Plant pathogens, Drought, Climate change, epidemics, Flax, Flax Rust, FOS: Biological sciences, Microbial Ecology, Snow & Ice, Climate Change Impacts, Weather & Atmospheric Science, Gunnison Basin

Description

The scale of influence of hydrological and thermal conditions on disease remains uncertain for most wild plant pathosystems, thus restricting our ability to predict the impacts of climate change. Analysis of the spatiotemporal spread of a fungal rust pathogen throughout four naturally occurring flax populations over the course of five growing seasons reveals relationships between epidemic magnitude and snow cover, relative humidity and temperature, as well as an unexpectedly significant effect of severe drought on disease progression. These results indicate that climate change will likely disrupt wild plant epidemics, and points to a need for further epidemiological studies characterizing the effects of environmental conditions on population-level disease dynamics in natural pathosystems.

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