Long-Term Anthropogenic Management and Associated Loss of Plant Diversity Deeply Impact Virome Richness and Composition of <i>Poaceae</i> Communities
François Maclot, Virginie Debue, Carolyn M. Malmström, Denis Filloux, Philippe Roumagnac, Mathilde Eck, Lucie Tamisier, Arnaud G. Blouin, Thierry Candresse, Sébastien Massart
Abstract
Because viruses have been mostly studied in cultivated plants, little is known about virus diversity and ecology in less-managed vegetation or about the influence of human management and agriculture on virome composition. Poaceae (grass family)-dominated communities provide invaluable opportunities to examine these ecological issues, as they are distributed worldwide across agro-ecological gradients, are essential for food security and conservation, and can be infected by numerous viruses. Here, we used multiple levels of analysis that considered plant communities, individual plants, virus species, and haplotypes to broaden understanding of the Poaceae virome and to evaluate host-parasite richness relationships within agro-ecological landscapes in our study area.