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ARS Home » Northeast Area » Frederick, Maryland » Foreign Disease-Weed Science Research » Research » Publications at this Location » Publication #411443

Research Project: Discovery and Development of Microbial-Based Biological Control Agents for Use Against Invasive Weeds in the United States

Location: Foreign Disease-Weed Science Research

Title: Importance of pathobiomes to the success of microbial weed biocontrol agents

Author
item Fulcher, Michael
item Tancos, Matthew
item Mueller, Rebecca
item TANNIÈRES, MÉLANIE - European Biological Control Laboratory (EBCL)

Submitted to: Biological Control
Publication Type: Other
Publication Acceptance Date: 3/12/2024
Publication Date: 3/15/2024
Citation: Fulcher, M.R., Tancos, M.A., Mueller, R.C., Tannières, M. 2024. Importance of pathobiomes to the success of microbial weed biocontrol agents. Biological Control. 192:105498. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.biocontrol.2024.105498.
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.biocontrol.2024.105498

Interpretive Summary: Invasive plants are home to a large number of diverse microbes, which complicates the use of introduced plant pathogens as biological control agents. This perspective article reviews recent research on interactions between plant pathogens and communities of plant-associated microbes that influence disease development. Based on this, research objectives and methods are proposed for biocontrol scientists working with plant pathogenic microbes. The research approaches and goals suggested here will inform future development and use of microbial biocontrol agents.

Technical Abstract: The role of microbial communities in the establishment of plant pathogens introduced to new environments as weed biocontrol agents is relatively unexplored. Substantial evidence from crop protection research shows how bulk microbial communities influence the establishment, survival, and success of pathogens. Just as mismatches between biocontrol agents, host genotypes, and climate can lead to establishment failure, we propose that mismatches between microbial biocontrol agents and resident microbiomes may be a cause of apparent weed biocontrol failures. From this perspective, we discuss recent progress in research on plant-associated microbial communities whose interactions influence disease development, or “pathobiomes,” and consider the implications for biocontrol agent evaluation and release. Open questions about how weed pathobiomes develop and influence agent success rates provide ample opportunity for researchers to adapt new methods and analytical frameworks that will enhance biocontrol programs. We conclude by prioritizing the development of standard methods to include microbiomes as a component of release studies. Developing a pathobiome-aware agent selection and release process will improve agent establishment rates and biocontrol outcomes.