Phytophthora ramorum does not cause physiologically significant systemic injury to california bay laurel, its primary reservoir host

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Abstract

California bay laurel trees (Umbellularia californica) play a crucial role in the reproduction and survival of Phytophthora ramorum in coastal California forests by supporting sporulation during the rainy season and by providing a means for the pathogen to survive the dry, Mediterranean summer. While bay laurel is thus critical to the epidemiology of sudden oak death and other P. ramorum diseases in California, the relatively minor symptoms observed on this reservoir host suggest that it may not sustain ecologically significant injury itself. The long-term role that P. ramorum will play in California forests will depend in part on the extent to which this pathogen decreases the ecological fitness of bay laurel. Despite the importance of this question, no study has yet investigated in detail the physiological impact that ramorum blight imposes on bay laurel. This experimental study quantifies the impact that P. ramorum has on artificially inoculated bay laurel seedlings with measurements that integrate the full injury that infection with anoomycete may cause: photosynthetic efficiency, total photosynthetic area, and growth. Leaf area and leaf mass were not impacted significantly by infection of P. ramorum Photosynthetic efficiency was mildly depressed in symptomatic, but not asymptomatic le aves, despite unnaturally high levels of necrosis that were imposed on the seedlings. These results demonstrate that bay laurel trees suffer only minor injury from ramorum blight beyond visible necrotic symptoms. Consequently, it is highly likely that bay laurel will continue to be widely available as a host for P. ramorumin California forests, which has long-term implications for the composition of these forests. © 2009 The American Phytopathological Society.

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Dileo, M. V., Bostock, R. M., & Rizzo, D. M. (2009). Phytophthora ramorum does not cause physiologically significant systemic injury to california bay laurel, its primary reservoir host. Phytopathology, 99(11), 1307–1311. https://doi.org/10.1094/PHYTO-99-11-1307

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