Abstract

Pyrenophora semeniperda, an important pathogen in Bromus tectorum seed banks in semi‐arid western North America, exhibits >4‐fold variation in mycelial growth rate. Host seeds exhibit seasonal changes in dormancy that affect the risk of pathogen‐caused mortality. The hypothesis tested is that contrasting seed dormancy phenotypes select for contrasting strategies for increasing pathogen fitness, and that increased fitness on nondormant seeds involves a resource trade‐off between toxin production and growth. The strategy for successfully attacking rapidly germinating nondormant seeds at high inoculum loads in autumn involves increased post‐infection aggressiveness to prevent seed escape through germination. An earlier study demonstrated that slow‐growing strains caused higher mortality than faster‐growing strains on nondormant host seeds at high inoculum loads. In this study, production of the toxin cytochalasin B was significantly higher in slower‐growing strains, and was induced only in seeds or in seed‐constituent‐containing media. Its production was reduced in vivo by Bromus tectorum seeds, suggesting direct involvement in pathogenesis on seeds. Fast‐growing strains caused significantly higher mortality than slow‐growing strains at low inoculum loads on dormant seeds, which apparently have resistance that is overcome at high loads or through rapid mycelial proliferation. In a co‐inoculation study, the fast‐growing isolate produced 3 × more stromata than the slow‐growing isolate on dormant seeds, whereas the slow‐growing isolate was twice as successful on nondormant seeds. These results provide evidence that mycelial growth rate variation and associated variation in cytochalasin B production represent a trade‐off maintained through temporally varying selection resulting from seasonal variation in host seed dormancy status.

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