Authors
Arnaud Capron, Nicolas Feau, Renate Heinzelmann, Irene Barnes, Andy Benowicz, Rosie E Bradshaw, Angela Dale, Kathy J Lewis, Timothy J Owen, Richard Reich, Tod D Ramsfield, Alex J Woods, Richard C Hamelin
Publication date
2021/1/11
Journal
Phytopathology®
Volume
111
Issue
1
Pages
116-127
Publisher
The American Phytopathological Society
Description
Many current tree improvement programs are incorporating assisted gene flow strategies to match reforestation efforts with future climates. This is the case for the lodgepole pine (Pinus contorta var. latifolia), the most extensively planted tree in western Canada. Knowledge of the structure and origin of pathogen populations associated with this tree would help improve the breeding effort. Recent outbreaks of the Dothistroma needle blight (DNB) pathogen Dothistroma septosporum on lodgepole pine in British Columbia and its discovery in Alberta plantations raised questions about the diversity and population structure of this pathogen in western Canada. Using genotyping-by-sequencing on 119 D. septosporum isolates from 16 natural pine populations and plantations from this area, we identified four genetic lineages, all distinct from the other DNB lineages from outside of North America. Modeling of the population …
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