The witchweed Striga gesnerioides and the cultivated cowpea: A geographical and historical analysis of their West African distribution points to the prevalence of agro-ecological factors and the parasite's multilocal evolution potential

PLoS One. 2021 Aug 4;16(8):e0254803. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0254803. eCollection 2021.

Abstract

The increasing severity of Striga gesnerioides attacks on cowpea across West Africa has been related to its prolificity, seed mobility and longevity, and adaptation to aridity, in a context of agricultural intensification. To understand this fast extension, we analyzed (1) the distributions of the crop and the witchweed with ecological niche modeling and multivariate climate analysis, and (2) the chronological information available from collections and the literature. The ecoclimatic envelope of S. gesnerioides attacks on cowpea is the same as on wild hosts. Consistently, the modeled distribution of cowpea infestations is closely similar to the simple superposition of the parasite model (involving all hosts) and the crop model. Striga gesnerioides infestations are restricted to the driest component of the cultivated cowpea ecoclimatic niche, corresponding to the Sahelian and Sudano-Sahelian belts and the Dahomey gap. Thus, the parasite distribution, determined by its own requirements, does not constrain cowpea cultivation under Guinean climates. The spatial and temporal distributions of S. gesnerioides field infestations are consistent with an earlier impact on cowpea production in eastern West Africa, related itself to a similar trend in cowpea cultivation intensification from Niger, Nigeria and Benin to Burkina Faso and Ghana. Mali and Senegal were affected later, and literature reports of Senegalese strains of S. gesnerioides from the wild developing virulence on cowpea offer a model for the diffusion of witchweed parasitism by multilocal evolution, through host-driven selection, instead of epidemic diffusion. A contrario, in Côte d'Ivoire, cowpea is much less widespread, so the parasite has remained confined to the wild compartment. Thus, both historical and ecogeographic analyses refute the vision of S. gesnerioides as an invader. Instead, they point to the increasing importance and intensification of the crop, and the consequent loss of biodiversity, as the main drivers of the extension and diversification of its crop-specific strains.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Africa, Western
  • Agriculture*
  • Biological Evolution*
  • Climate
  • Ecosystem*
  • Geography*
  • Host-Parasite Interactions
  • Prevalence
  • Principal Component Analysis
  • Striga / physiology*
  • Vigna / physiology*

Associated data

  • figshare/10.6084/m9.figshare.14994780

Grants and funding

This study was supported by the CowpeaSquare project funded by CCRP - McKnight Foundation (Grant number 15-114). Abou-Soufianou Sadda received a PhD grant from the CowpeaSquare project (core grant). The French Embassy in Niger (SCAC Service), the Institute of Ecology and Environmental Sciences, iEES-Paris, of the French Institute of Research for Development (IRD), and CIRAD (UMR AGAP), funded his international travel costs. The funders had no role in study design, data collection and analysis, decision to publish, or preparation of the manuscript.