Tracing the role of human civilization in the globalization of plant pathogens
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Date
Authors
Santini, Alberto
Liebhold, Andrew
Migliorini, Duccio
Woodward, Steve
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Nature Publishing Group
Abstract
Co-evolution between plants and parasites, including herbivores and pathogens, has arguably
generated much of Earth's biological diversity. Within an ecosystem, co-evolution of plants
and pathogens is a stepwise reciprocal evolutionary interaction: epidemics result in intense
selection pressures on both host and pathogen populations, ultimately allowing long-term
persistence and ecosystem stability. Historically, plants and pathogens evolved in unique
regional assemblages, largely isolated from other assemblages by geographical barriers.
When barriers are broken, non-indigenous pathogenic organisms are introduced into new
environments, potentially finding suitable hosts lacking resistance genes and environments
favouring pathogenic behaviour; this process may result in epidemics of newly emerging
diseases. Biological invasions are tightly linked to human activities and have been a constant
feature throughout human history. Several pathways enable pathogens to enter new
environments, the great majority being human mediated. The fossil record provides evidence that diseases commonly affected plants some 250 million
years ago (Dark & Gent, 2001). The recurrence of wheat rust outbreaks is reported by Roman
authors such as Cicero, Varro and Columella (2100-1950 BP). Rust outbreaks were so feared
that there was a god/goddess of rust (Robigus/Robigine) to whom processions, sacrifices and
feasts were dedicated in order to prevent crop destruction.
During the last 200 years the incidence of plant diseases has increased exponentially in terms
of both numbers and severity (Santini et al, 2013). Alien pathogen introductions can lead to
novel host-pathogen associations or novel pathogen-pathogen combinations, with no
previous co-evolutionary history.
Why are so many invasive plant pathogens now appearing? The aim of this paper is to
increase understanding of the means of introduction and spread of these pathogens, which, as
with most invasive species, can be traced to human behaviour, societal development, technological change, and geopolitical trends. We believe that reviewing historical
developments enhances our ability to anticipate future developments.
Description
Keywords
Geopolitics, Famine, Plant hunters, Plant for planting, Plant trade, Alien invasive pathogens, Human migrations, Human civilization, Plant pathogens, Globalization
Sustainable Development Goals
Citation
Santini, A., Liebhold, A., Migliorini, D. & Woodward, S. 2018, 'Tracing the role of human civilization in the globalization of plant pathogens', ISME Journal, vol. 12, no.3, pp. 647-652.