Understanding the temporal dynamics of invasive late blight populations in India for improved management practices

Phytopathology. 2024 May 9. doi: 10.1094/PHYTO-03-24-0082-R. Online ahead of print.

Abstract

The microbial oomycete pathogen, Phytophthora infestans causes severe epidemics of potato late blight in crops globally. Disease management benefits from an understanding of the diversity of pathogen populations. In this study, we explore the dynamics of P. infestans populations in the late blight-potato agro-ecosystem across the Indian subcontinent. Investigations of the macroecological observations at the field level and microbial ecological principles provided insights into future pathogen behaviour. We use a comprehensive simple sequence repeat allele dataset to demonstrate that an invasive clonal lineage called EU_13_A2 has dominated populations over 14 years across India, Bangladesh, and Pakistan. Increasing levels of sub-clonal variation were tracked over time and space and, for the first time, populations in Asia were also compared to the source populations from Europe. Within India, a regional pathogen population structure was observed with evidence for local migration, cross-border movement between surrounding countries, and introductions via imports. There was also evidence of genetic drift and between-season transmission of more strongly pathogenic sub-clones with a complete displacement of some sub-clonal types. The limited introduction of novel genotypes and the use of resistant potato cultivars could contribute to the dominance of the 13_A2 lineage. The insights will contribute to the management of the pathogen in these key global potato production regions.

Keywords: Ecology; Oomycetes; Population Biology.