Plants and animals host many microbial symbionts, including both pathogens and mutualists. However, most experimental studies include only one symbiont, and few examine interactions of more than two microbes with their host. Here, we examined whether coinfection with two pathogens causes a synergistic reduction in the benefits that hosts receive from a microbial mutualist. We also measured the effects of a microbial mutualist on the within and between host competition between coinfecting pathogens. We manipulated the presence of Clover yellow vein virus (ClYVV), Bean common mosaic virus (BCMV), rhizobia bacteria, and nitrogen fertilizer in common beans (Phaseolus vulgaris). We found asymmetric, context-dependent interactions among the three...
A mechanistic understanding of community ecology requires tackling the nonadditive effects of multis...
Recent studies have documented effects of plant-viruses on host plants that appear to enhance transm...
Coinfection, whereby the same host is infected by more than one pathogen strain, may favor faster ho...
Plants and animals host many microbial symbionts, including both pathogens and mutualists. However, ...
Coinfections of one host with multiple pathogen species are common, and have important implications ...
It is increasingly clear that microbial plant symbionts can influence interactions between their pla...
A growing body of literature links resources of hosts to their risk of infectious disease. Yet most ...
Microbial symbionts exhibit broad genotypic variation in their fitness effects on hosts, leaving hos...
It is increasingly clear that microbial plant symbionts can influence interactions between their pla...
Thesis (Ph.D.), Entomology, Washington State UniversityPlant viruses interact with arthropod vectors...
Many models of mutualisms show that mutualisms are unstable if hosts lack mechanisms enabling prefer...
Studies of plant–pathogen interactions have historically focused on simple models of infection invol...
Bacterial infections are often polymicrobial, leading to intricate pathogen-pathogen and pathogen-ho...
Pathogens are common and diverse in natural communities and have been implicated in the success of h...
Bacterial mutualists generate major fitness benefits for eukaryotes, reshaping the host phenotype an...
A mechanistic understanding of community ecology requires tackling the nonadditive effects of multis...
Recent studies have documented effects of plant-viruses on host plants that appear to enhance transm...
Coinfection, whereby the same host is infected by more than one pathogen strain, may favor faster ho...
Plants and animals host many microbial symbionts, including both pathogens and mutualists. However, ...
Coinfections of one host with multiple pathogen species are common, and have important implications ...
It is increasingly clear that microbial plant symbionts can influence interactions between their pla...
A growing body of literature links resources of hosts to their risk of infectious disease. Yet most ...
Microbial symbionts exhibit broad genotypic variation in their fitness effects on hosts, leaving hos...
It is increasingly clear that microbial plant symbionts can influence interactions between their pla...
Thesis (Ph.D.), Entomology, Washington State UniversityPlant viruses interact with arthropod vectors...
Many models of mutualisms show that mutualisms are unstable if hosts lack mechanisms enabling prefer...
Studies of plant–pathogen interactions have historically focused on simple models of infection invol...
Bacterial infections are often polymicrobial, leading to intricate pathogen-pathogen and pathogen-ho...
Pathogens are common and diverse in natural communities and have been implicated in the success of h...
Bacterial mutualists generate major fitness benefits for eukaryotes, reshaping the host phenotype an...
A mechanistic understanding of community ecology requires tackling the nonadditive effects of multis...
Recent studies have documented effects of plant-viruses on host plants that appear to enhance transm...
Coinfection, whereby the same host is infected by more than one pathogen strain, may favor faster ho...