Hwang, J.; Jeffers, S.N.; and Oak, S.W. 2010. Aquatic habitats—A reservoir for population diversity in the genus Phytophthora. Phytopathology 100:S150.
Occurrences of oak decline and sudden oak death in forests of Europe and the west coast of the U.S.A., respectively, have focused attention on the species of Phytophthora present in natural ecosystems. We have been investigating the diversity of species of Phytophthora present in forest streams in the eastern U.S.A. Phytophthora spp. are well adapted to aquatic environments and can be recovered from stream water by baiting and filtration. Extensive surveys in multiple states revealed that a diversity of species occurs naturally in forest streams. In one study, five forest streams in western North Carolina were monitored monthly for a year. Seven species—P. cambivora, P. cinnamomi, P. citricola, P. citrophthora, P. gonapodyides, P. heveae, and P. pseudosyringae—and seven morphologically and genetically distinct groups of isolates were detected. Samples of stream-side soils and plants with symptoms also were collected, but only three species were detected: P. cinnamomi and P. heveae in soils and P. citricola and P. heveae on plants. Species of Phytophthora consistently were detected in streams during winter months when air temperatures were near or below freezing, which are not conducive to lesion development and sporulation. These results suggest that the native population of Phytophthora spp. in stream water is different from those in terrestrial habitats. The species of Phytophthora present in streams may occupy a unique niche—i.e., they appear to be aquatic inhabitants and not transient visitors.
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