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Data from: Migration patterns and changes in population biology associated with the worldwide spread of the oilseed rape pathogen Leptosphaeria maculans

Cite this dataset

Dilmaghani, Azita et al. (2012). Data from: Migration patterns and changes in population biology associated with the worldwide spread of the oilseed rape pathogen Leptosphaeria maculans [Dataset]. Dryad. https://doi.org/10.5061/dryad.90p3n019

Abstract

Pathogen introductions into novel areas can lead to the emergence of new fungal diseases of plants. Understanding the origin, introduction pathways, possible changes in reproductive system and population size of fungal pathogens is essential in devising an integrated strategy for the control of these diseases. We used minisatellite markers to infer the worldwide invasion history of the fungal plant pathogen Leptosphaeria maculans, which causes stem canker (blackleg) of oilseed and vegetable brassicas. Clustering analyses partitioned genotypes into distinct populations corresponding to major geographic regions, along with two differentiated populations in Western Canada. Comparison of invasion scenarios using Approximate Bayesian Computation suggested an origin of the pathogen in the USA, the region where epidemics were first recorded, and independent introductions from there over the last few decades into Eastern Canada (Ontario), Europe and Australia. The population in Western Canada appeared to be founded from a source in Ontario and the population in Chile resulted from an admixture between multiple sources. A bottleneck was inferred for the introduction into Western Canada but not into Europe, Ontario or Australia. Clonality appeared high in Western Canada, possibly because environmental conditions there were less conducive to sexual reproduction. Leptosphaeria maculans is a model invasive pathogen with contrasting features in different regions: shallow population structure, high genetic variability and regular sexual recombination in some regions, by comparison with reduced genetic variability, high rates of asexual multiplication, strong population structure or admixture in others.

Usage notes

Location

Western Australia
Grignon France 48°51′07″ N 01°55′05″ E
Letellier Manitoba Canada 49°09′54″ N 97°20′22″ W
Somerset Manitoba Canada 49°24′43″ N 98°39′32″ W
Carman Manitoba Canada 49°29′57″ N 98°0′3″ W
Humboldt Saskatchewan Canada 52°12′07″ N 105°07′23″ W
Temuco Chile 38°44′13″ S 72°35′59″ W
Fort Saskatchewan Alberta Canada 53°42′47″ N 113°12′51″ W
Rosthern Saskatchewan Canada 52°40′00″ N 106°20′00″ W
Camrose Alberta Canada 53°01′22″ N 112°49′42″ W
Kincardine Ontario Canada 44°10′00″ N 81°38′00″ W
Svalof Sweden 55°55′00″ N 13°07′00″ E
Saskatoon Saskatchewan Canada 52°07′45″ N 106°40′13″ W
Plains Georgia USA 32°02′01″ N 84°23′36″ W
Griffin Georgia USA 33°14′51″ N 84°16′15″ W
Boxworth United Kingdom 52°25’00″ N 00°16’67″ E
Teendorf Germany 53°02′22″ N 10°23′03″ E