Abstract
AbstractOomycetes are an ubiquitous protistan lineage including devastating crop parasites. Although their ecology in agrosystems has been widely studied, little is known of their distribution in natural and semi-natural ecosystems. We provide here a baseline of the diversity and distribution of soil oomycetes, classified by lifestyles (biotrophy, hemibiotrophy and saprotrophy), at the landscape scale in temperate grassland and forest. From 600 soil samples, we obtained 1,148 Operational Taxonomy Units representing ∼20 million Illumina reads (region V4, 18S rRNA gene). We found a majority of hemibiotrophic plant pathogens, which are parasites spending part of their life cycle as saprotrophs after the death of the host. Overall both grassland and forest constitute an important reservoir of plant pathogens. In forests, relative abundances of obligate biotrophs and hemibiotrophs differed between regions and showed opposite responses to edaphic conditions and human-induced management intensification, suggesting different ecological requirements for these two functional guilds.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory