Diversity inhibits foliar fungal diseases in grasslands: Potential mechanisms and temperature dependence

Ecol Lett. 2024 May;27(5):e14435. doi: 10.1111/ele.14435.

Abstract

A long-standing debate exists among ecologists as to how diversity regulates infectious diseases (i.e., the nature of diversity-disease relationships); a dilution effect refers to when increasing host diversity inhibits infectious diseases (i.e., negative diversity-disease relationships). However, the generality, strength, and potential mechanisms underlying negative diversity-disease relationships in natural ecosystems remain unclear. To this end, we conducted a large-scale survey of 63 grassland sites across China to explore diversity-disease relationships. We found widespread negative diversity-disease relationships that were temperature-dependent; non-random diversity loss played a fundamental role in driving these patterns. Our study provides field evidence for the generality and temperature dependence of negative diversity-disease relationships in grasslands, becoming stronger in colder regions, while also highlighting the role of non-random diversity loss as a mechanism. These findings have important implications for community ecology, disease ecology, and epidemic control.

Keywords: encounter reduction; host regulation; intraspecific variation; pathogen; species turnover.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Biodiversity*
  • China
  • Fungi / physiology
  • Grassland*
  • Plant Diseases* / microbiology
  • Plant Leaves / microbiology
  • Poaceae / microbiology
  • Poaceae / physiology
  • Temperature*