Abstract

Recent disease outbreaks caused by alien invasive pathogens into European forests posed a serious threat to forest sustainability with relevant environmental and economic effects. Many of the alien tree pathogens recently introduced into Europe were not previously included on any quarantine lists, thus they were not subject to phytosanitary inspections. The identification and description of alien fungi potentially pathogenic to native European flora before their introduction in Europe, is a paramount need in order to limit the risk of invasion and the impact to forest ecosystems. To determine the potential invasive fungi, a sentinel trees plot was established in Fuyang, China, using healthy seedlings of European tree species including Quercus petreae, Q. suber, and Q. ilex. The fungal assemblage associated with symptomatic specimens was studied using the tag-encoded 454 pyrosequencing of the nuclear ribosomal internal transcribed spacer-1 (ITS 1). Taxa with probable Asiatic origin were identified and included plant pathogenic genera. These results indicate that sentinel plants may be a strategic tool to improve the prevention of bioinvasions.

Highlights

  • In the past 200yrs, the number of fungal and fungal-like Invasive Alien Species (IAS) challenging plants in Europe has increased exponentially, especially in regards to ascomycetes [1]

  • Alternaria-like conidia were observed on all Quercus spp. specimens (Fig. 1E)

  • Our study reports for the first time the colonization of a selected collection of EU trees by native fungi while growing in China, and the potential of sentinel plantations to detect taxa pathogenic to EU trees that might pose a biosecurity risk for Europe

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Summary

Introduction

In the past 200yrs, the number of fungal and fungal-like Invasive Alien Species (IAS) challenging plants in Europe has increased exponentially, especially in regards to ascomycetes [1]. Most of them (57%) have been introduced to Europe through living plants and have caused serious epidemics. The recent outbreak of ash dieback in Central Europe and the UK [2], the spread of pitch canker of pine in plantations in Spain [3], the sudden appearance of Phytophthora spp. outbreaks in the UK [4]-[5] challenging both plantations and natural forests are only recent examples of new threats to be added to ‘old’ invasions still threatening European forests. Sentinel Trees: A Method to Forecast Invasive Fungi

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