Abstract
SummaryGeneralist hemiparasites may attach to many different host species and experience complex parasite-host interactions. How these parasite-host interactions impact on the fitness of hemiparasitic plants remain largely unknown.We used experimentally tractable eyebrights (Euphrasia, Orobanchaceae) to understand parasite-host interactions affecting the performance of a generalist hemiparasitic plant. Common garden experiments were carried out measuring Euphrasia performance across 45 diverse hosts and in different parasite-host combinations.We showed that variation in hemiparasite performance could be attributed mainly to host species and host phylogenetic relationships (λ = 0.82; 0.17-1.00 Cl). When this variation in performance is broken down temporally, annual host species cause earlier flowering, and lead to poorer performance late in the season. While Euphrasia species typically perform similarly on a given host species, some eyebrights show more specialised parasite-host interactions.Our results show that generalist hemiparasites only benefit from attaching to a limited, but phylogenetically divergent, subset of hosts. The conserved responses of divergent Euphrasia species suggest hemiparasite performance is affected by common host attributes. However, evidence for more complex parasite-host interactions show that a generalist hemiparasite can potentially respond to individual host selection pressures and may adapt to local host communities.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory