1. Introduction
The fungus
Sphaeropsis sapinea (Fr.) Dyko and B. Sutton is a critical pathogen for almost 60 conifer species that belong to
Abies,
Cedrus,
Juniperus,
Larix,
Picea,
Pinus,
Pseudotsuga, and
Thuja [
1] (p. 186). It causes tip blight, stem canker, rhizome decay, and sapstain and has serious threats to forest health in nearly 40 countries such as New Zealand, Australia, South Africa, the United States of America, Finland, Germany, and China [
2,
3,
4,
5,
6,
7,
8] (pp. 224–227). As an endophyte, it may occur as a latent pathogen and produces no visible symptoms in the hosts [
9].
Sphaeropsis sapinea infesting coniferous trees of any age can induce disease when the hosts are subjected to physiological stress or physical damage [
10]. A high incidence of the disease results in extensive forest blight, and adversely affects the integrity and stability of forest ecosystems [
11,
12,
13,
14].
The natural secondary Japanese red pine (
Pinus densiflora Sieb. et Zucc.) forests of the Kunyu Mountains are the original habitats and distribution centers of Japanese red pine in China and even Northeast Asia. They have abundant species, genetic, and ecosystem diversity. Their germplasms are considered to have high scientific research and practical value [
15,
16]. However, Diplodia tip blight caused by
S. sapinea is a major disease affecting the natural secondary Japanese red pine forests of the Kunyu Mountains. It threatens the healthy and stable development of forests. Nevertheless, it is unknown why this pathogen has induced an epidemic in this region.
Studies on the relationships between Diplodia tip blight in pine and environmental factors showed that
S. sapinea, as an endophyte, can become pathogenic, when its hosts have been weakened by abiotic stresses such as precipitation deficits, elevated temperatures, drought, and hailstorms [
6,
7,
17,
18,
19].
Theoretical studies revealed that tree species diversity has a significant impact on disease prevalence. For example, the risk of
Picea abies (L.) H. Karsten root rot caused by
Heterobasidion annosum (Fr.) Bref. is lower in the
P. abies mixed forest than it is in the
P. abies pure forest [
20]. Hantsch et al. [
21] found a negative correlation between the disease index of oak powdery mildew (
Erysiphe alphitoides (Griffon and Maubl.) U. Braun and S. Takam. and
Erysiphe hypophylla (Nevod.) U. Braun and Cunningt.) and tree species diversity. By contrast, Menges and Loucks [
22] suggested that the mortality of certain host tree species, such as
Quercus velutina Lam.,
Quercus borealis Michx., and
Quercus ellipsoidalis E. J. Hill infested with
Ceratocystis fagacearum (Bretz.) Hunt) rise with the increase of
Quercus species diversity. Furthermore, the relationship between plant diversity and disease is highly complex in multi-host forest ecosystems [
23]. For instance, most plants in forest ecosystems are hosts of
Phytophthora ramorum Werres, De Cock and Man in’t Veld [
24,
25]. However, substitute hosts can impede disease spread in highly susceptible hosts and reduce the impact of the pathogen on host plants [
26]. Xie and Liang [
27] identified that the disease index of moso bamboo (
Phyllostachys edulis (Carriere) J. Houzeau) shoot blight (
Ceratosphaeria phyllostachydis Zhang) is highest in the moso bamboo–conifer mixed forest, moderate in the moso bamboo–hardwood mixed forest, and lowest in the moso bamboo pure forest. Meanwhile, the shrub–herb plants are important components of the forest community. Their diversity may alter humidity, soil, light, and other factors inside the forest, and further affect tree growth and the forest environment, which act on the occurrence and development of diseases [
28,
29]. Plant diversity in the shrub and herb layers of different moso bamboo stands have different effects on the development of moso bamboo shoot blight [
27]. While the species richness and Shannon–Wiener index increased and Simpson index decreased in the shrub–herb layers of
Dalbergia odorifera T. Chen mixed forest, the disease index of black scurf (
Phyllachora dalbergiicola Henn.) in
D. odorifera sharply decreased [
30]. These studies demonstrate that there are explicit relationships between disease and environmental factors. Nevertheless, the relationship between plant diversity and disease is complex. The differences in plant diversity among different stand types and vertical structure layers have different influences on disease occurrence.
In the present study, we focused on whether the plant diversity has an impact on the occurrence of Diplodia tip blight in P. densiflora. The effect between plant diversity and Diplodia tip blight in P. densiflora in various stand types and vertical structure layers of natural secondary Japanese red pine forests in the Kunyu Mountains in China was expounded. In this analysis, environmental factors were kept relatively consistent. The assumption was that plant diversity has significantly different effects on the disease occurrence in different forest types. It could infer the feasibility of a method for adjusting plant diversity structure to control the prevalence of Diplodia tip blight in P. densiflora, based on this effect.
4. Discussion
In the present study, the disease index of Diplodia tip blight in the
P. densiflora–conifer mixed forest was larger than the disease indices of Diplodia tip blight in the
P. densiflora–hardwood mixed forest and the
P. densiflora–pure mixed forest. Moreover, the disease index was positively correlated with the tree diversity indices. Similarly, Gerlach et al. [
43] reported that the extent of damage caused by root rot (
Armillaria sp.) rises with the increase of the proportion of coniferous species in a mixed forest. Our result was in good agreement with the associational susceptibility hypothesis that the disease severity intensifies when multiple host plants are combined [
44,
45,
46,
47]. In the
P. densiflora–conifer mixed forest, there are high relative abundances of both native
P. densiflora and introduced
P. thunbergii. These species have a close genetic relationship and are hosts of the Diplodia tip blight pathogen. They have similar morphological, physiological, and biochemical characteristics, such as similar nutrients, which could provide enough resources to support pathogen proliferation and increase the risks of host parasitization and Diplodia tip blight epidemics in
P. densiflora [
48].
The present study also showed that the disease index of Diplodia tip blight in
P. densiflora was lowest in the
P. densiflora–hardwood mixed forest and negatively correlated with the tree diversity indices. It is in line with Karlman et al.’s [
49] conclusion that certain fungal diseases in conifer are negatively correlated with the hardwood richness. This phenomenon upholds the associational resistance hypothesis that the disease severity gradually decreases with increasing tree diversity in mixed forest consisting of both host trees and non-host trees [
44,
46]. In the
P. densiflora–hardwood mixed forest, the host tree species of
S. sapinea,
P. densiflora, and its non-host tree species,
Q. acutissima and
Q. variabilis, all have high relative abundances. Non-host trees may create form physical or chemical barriers that impede the extensive localization, spread, and colonization of the pathogen [
50]. In this way, non-host trees could lower the incidence of Diplodia tip blight in
P. densiflora. In addition, the increase of the relative abundance in hardwood in the
P. densiflora–hardwood mixed forest diminishes the amount of resources available to the pathogen, thereby hindering its growth and population establishment [
47,
50,
51]. For example, as there are fewer
P. abies in the
P. abies-
Pinus sylvestris L. mixed forest than there are in the
P. abies pure forest, the range and quantity of
H. annosum infections on adjacent trees are reduced in the former case [
20].
The disease index of Diplodia tip blight in the P. densiflora pure forest is higher than that in the P. densiflora–hardwood mixed forest and lower than that in the P. densiflora–conifer mixed forest. Furthermore, the differences among stand types were significant. Meanwhile, the disease index was negatively correlated with the tree diversity indices. As the P. densiflora pure forest has a large proportion of host-P. densiflora, the disease index there is significantly larger than that in the P. densiflora–hardwood mixed forest. However, the other tree species with ratios of cross-sectional area at breast height <30% are mainly non-host hardwoods. Therefore, the disease index of Diplodia tip blight is lower in the P. densiflora pure forest than it is in the P. densiflora–conifer mixed forest.
Based on the foregoing findings, it is speculated that there are some promotion or inhibition effects between different tree species and the disease of Diplodia tip blight in
P. densiflora that need to be confirmed. Pan [
16] found that
Cephalcia Kunyushanica Xiao have significant positive effects with host
P. densiflora and
P. thunbergii, and have significant negative effects with
Populus ussuriensis Kom. and
Hovenia acerba Lindl. The purpose of alleviating the harm of
C. Kunyushanica could be achieved by properly matching
P. ussuriensis and
H. acerba among hosts. Therefore, taking some forest management measures to appropriately increase non-host broad-leaved tree species could mitigate the Diplodia tip blight disease.
There were significant positive correlations between the disease index of Diplodia tip blight in
P. densiflora and the plant diversity indices in the shrub–herb layers of all three stands except the understory herb layer of
P. densiflora pure forest. Clearly, there may be possible explanations that because of forest resource limitations, competition between trees and understory plants might dramatically increase with shrub–herb diversity. These factors influence the host growth regulation and reduce the host resistance to the pathogen of Diplodia tip blight [
30]. Another reason may be that as plant diversity increases in the shrub–herb layers, high-humidity microclimates rapidly develop in the understory environments, which favor the proliferation and dispersal of pathogen mycelia and conidia in diseased needles, shoots, and stems. [
1,
52]. In this manner, the infection risk of Diplodia tip blight in
P. densiflora increases with decreasing host tree vigor. To control the occurrence and dispersal of Diplodia tip blight in
P. densiflora, the diversity structure of the understory vegetation must be modified in natural secondary Japanese red pine forests.
Researchers in China reported that excess precipitation causes root waterlogging and poor ventilation in host trees of
S. sapinea, which results in weakening of the host trees and further aggravates the occurrence of Diplodia tip blight [
1,
17,
53]. By contrast, the occurrence of Diplodia tip blight caused by
S. sapinea is different in countries such as Germany, Italy, the United States of America, and South Africa, where asymptomatic endophytic fungi become pathogen since host resistance is weakened by abiotic stresses such as precipitation deficits, elevated temperatures, drought, and hailstorms [
8] (pp. 224–227), [
6,
54]. The above results inferred that extreme abiotic stresses increase disease susceptibility of host trees, and then lead to the prevalence of the disease. Therefore, to avoid the influence of the related abiotic factors, the effect of plant diversity on the occurrence of Diplodia tip blight in
P. densiflora was analyzed in the case of relatively consistent environmental factors in the research plots.
Generalized linear model analysis revealed that the three prediction models respectively established with the Simpson indices of the tree and shrub layers and the Shannon–Wiener index of the tree layer as independent variables in the P. densiflora–hardwood mixed forest, the Simpson indices of the herb, tree, and shrub layers as independent variables in the P. densiflora–conifer mixed forest, and the Shannon–Wiener indices of the tree and shrub layers as independent variables in the P. densiflora pure mixed forest could better explain the variation of Diplodia tip blight in P. densiflora disease index in three stands. Both the Shannon–Wiener index and Simpson index contain the information of plant species richness and evenness and can reflect characteristics of plant diversity. In the practical application, the models obtained in the three stands were used to predict the disease index of Diplodia tip blight in P. densiflora, which could provide a reference for prevention and control of this disease.