Abstract

Invasive plants, which cause substantial economic and ecological impacts, acquire both pathogens and beneficial microbes in their introduced ranges. Communities of fungal endophytes are known to mediate impacts of pathogens on plant fitness but few studies have examined the temporal dynamics of fungal communities on invasive plants. The annual grass Microstegium vimineum, an invader of forests and riparian areas throughout the eastern United States, experiences annual epidemics of disease caused by Bipolaris pathogens. Our objective was to characterize the dynamics of foliar fungal communities on M. vimineum over a growing season during a foliar disease epidemic. First, we asked how the fungal community in the phyllosphere changed over 2 months that corresponded with increasing disease severity. Second, we experimentally suppressed disease with fungicide in half of the plots and asked how the treatment affected fungal community diversity and composition. We found increasingly diverse foliar fungal communities and substantial changes in community composition between timepoints using high-throughput amplicon sequencing of the internal transcribed spacer 2 region. Monthly fungicide application caused shifts in fungal community composition relative to control samples. Fungicide application increased diversity at the late-season timepoint, suggesting that it suppressed dominant fungicide sensitive taxa and allowed other fungal taxa to flourish. These results raise new questions regarding the roles of putative endophytes found in the phyllosphere given the limited number of pathogens known to cause disease on M. vimineum in its invasive range.

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