Untangling host nutrition, coinfection, and disease risk using grasses as a model system

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Untangling host nutrition, coinfection, and disease risk using grasses as a model system

Event Date

Thursday, April 23, 2015 - 12:00pm to 1:00pm
Elizabeth Borer, Associate Professor
University of Minnesota 
Untangling host nutrition, coinfection and disease risk using grasses as a model system

 

 
In both ecology and medicine, we often focus our efforts on understanding the interactions between a single pathogen species and a single host species. While this simplification can be extremely useful for some questions, pathogens and their hosts often interact within a complex community of hosts, vectors, and multiple pathogenic species. In addition, host nutrition can determine the success of infection and co-infection and also can determine the disease resulting from infection. Plants can serve as a model system for studying this: they provide a unique opportunity to experimentally tease apart these multiple varying factors. I will present findings from experimental work in the field and lab to tease apart the relative importance of regional and local context, host nutrition, and host traits in determining infection and co-infection by insect-vectored viruses in grass hosts.