Nutrient limitation is a basic ecological constraint that has received little attention in studies on virus production and disease dynamics. Nutrient availability could directly limit the production of viral nucleic acids and proteins, or alternatively limit host growth and thus indirectly limit metabolic pathways necessary for viral replication. In order to compare direct and indirect effects of nutrient limitation on virus production within hosts, we manipulated soil nitrogen (N) and phosphorus (P) availability in a glasshouse for the wild grass host Bromus hordeaceus and the viral pathogen Barley yellow dwarf virus-PAV. We found that soil N additions increased viral concentrations within host tissues, and the effect was mediated by host ...
Aboveground fungal pathogens can substantially reduce biomass production in grasslands. However, we ...
1. Understanding environmentally dependent variation in interspecific interactions is needed for eva...
Coinfections of one host with multiple pathogen species are common, and have important implications ...
Nutrient limitation is a basic ecological constraint that has received little attention in studies o...
Nutrient limitation is a basic ecological constraint that has received little attention in studies o...
Background/Question/Methods Inter- and intra-specific competition for nutrient resources governs lif...
International audienceHost nutrient supply can mediate host–pathogen and pathogen–pathogen interacti...
To understand the eco-evolutionary significance of plant viruses in nature, we must (i) quantify the...
A growing body of literature links resources of hosts to their risk of infectious disease. Yet most ...
Host characteristics commonly determine infection risk, but infection can also be mediated by region...
Pathogens are common and diverse in natural communities and have been implicated in the success of h...
Ecological stoichiometry and resource competition theory both predict that nutrient rates and ratios...
Ecological stoichiometry and resource competition theory both predict that nutrient rates and ratios...
Resource-ratio theory has widely been used to explain outcomes of competitive interactions between s...
Competitive interactions among free living organisms such as plants and algae are known to be regula...
Aboveground fungal pathogens can substantially reduce biomass production in grasslands. However, we ...
1. Understanding environmentally dependent variation in interspecific interactions is needed for eva...
Coinfections of one host with multiple pathogen species are common, and have important implications ...
Nutrient limitation is a basic ecological constraint that has received little attention in studies o...
Nutrient limitation is a basic ecological constraint that has received little attention in studies o...
Background/Question/Methods Inter- and intra-specific competition for nutrient resources governs lif...
International audienceHost nutrient supply can mediate host–pathogen and pathogen–pathogen interacti...
To understand the eco-evolutionary significance of plant viruses in nature, we must (i) quantify the...
A growing body of literature links resources of hosts to their risk of infectious disease. Yet most ...
Host characteristics commonly determine infection risk, but infection can also be mediated by region...
Pathogens are common and diverse in natural communities and have been implicated in the success of h...
Ecological stoichiometry and resource competition theory both predict that nutrient rates and ratios...
Ecological stoichiometry and resource competition theory both predict that nutrient rates and ratios...
Resource-ratio theory has widely been used to explain outcomes of competitive interactions between s...
Competitive interactions among free living organisms such as plants and algae are known to be regula...
Aboveground fungal pathogens can substantially reduce biomass production in grasslands. However, we ...
1. Understanding environmentally dependent variation in interspecific interactions is needed for eva...
Coinfections of one host with multiple pathogen species are common, and have important implications ...