Spatial structure of a soil-borne fungal plant pathogen in an untilled grassland: insights using new analytical tools
Understanding spatial patterns of soil‑borne fungal pathogens is key to predicting their ecological impacts, yet most studies rely on coarse sampling in agricultural systems. This study quantified Macrophomina phaseolina microsclerotia across multiple spatial scales in an untilled Kansas grassland. Even at 7‑cm resolution, the pathogen showed high spatial variability but no evidence of aggregation. Point‑pattern analyses revealed random distributions and weak relationships with measured soil or plant variables. These findings contrast with agricultural studies reporting clustering, likely due to ecological differences and the use of more robust spatial statistics. The results highlight the need to examine temporal dynamics to better identify drivers of M. phaseolina abundance.
Subject Tags
- Soils
- Grassland
Abstract
Understanding the link between spatial patterns of soil-borne fungal plant pathogens (SFPP) and environmental conditions is an important first step to understanding how these organisms impact both agricultural and untilled systems. However, the vast majority of SFPP spatial patterns studies have occurred in agricultural systems and relied on basic statistical measures of variance. Recent statistical advancements in spatial analysis combined with resampling strategies allow increased insight into spatial patterns but require robust sampling designs. Here, we begin to address this knowledge gap for Macrophomina phaseolina by quantifying its spatial pattern at multiple spatial scales in an untilled grassland system in Riley County, Kansas, U.S.A, and relate these patterns to soil and plant variables. Using microsclerotia density as a measure of M. phaseolina abundance, we found considerable spatial variability in untilled soil, even at a scale much finer than historically sampled for M. phaseolina scales (7 cm). We utilized point pattern analysis to examine how densities are arranged in space, and we found no evidence of spatial aggregation. Rather, M. phaseolina density was randomly distributed and did not strongly associate with any measured soil or plant variables. Our findings contrast with previous work detecting aggregation of M. phaseolina likely due to our use of more robust, spatially explicit statistics that examine multiple scales as well as the ecological dichotomy between untilled grassland systems and row-crop agricultural systems. Additionally, the fact that high spatial variation of M. phaseolina over small scales was poorly explained by plant or soil variables suggests that a better understanding of temporal variation can aid in identifying factors that most influence M. phaseolina abundance.
Citation
Houchen, B. B., Houseman, G. R., & Schouten, O. S. (2025). Spatial structure of a soil-borne fungal plant pathogen in an untilled grassland: insights using new analytical tools. Fungal Ecology, 77, 101456. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.funeco.2025.101456
TNC Authors
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Olivia S. Schouten
Kankakee Sands Land Steward, Indiana
The Nature Conservancy
Email: olivia.schouten@tnc.org