Elevated Genetic Diversity in the Emerging Blueberry Pathogen Exobasidium maculosum

Emerging diseases caused by fungi are increasing at an alarming rate. Exobasidium leaf and fruit spot of blueberry, caused by the fungus Exobasidium maculosum, is an emerging disease that has rapidly increased in prevalence throughout the southeastern USA, severely reducing fruit quality in some plantings. The objectives of this study were to determine the genetic diversity of E. maculosum in the southeastern USA to elucidate the basis of disease emergence and to investigate if populations of E. maculosum are structured by geography, host species, or tissue type. We sequenced three conserved loci from 82 isolates collected from leaves and fruit of rabbiteye blueberry (Vaccinium virgatum), highbush blueberry (V. corymbosum), and southern highbush blueberry (V. corymbosum hybrids) from commercial fields in Georgia and North Carolina, USA, and 6 isolates from lowbush blueberry (V. angustifolium) from Maine, USA, and Nova Scotia, Canada. Populations of E. maculosum from the southeastern USA and from lowbush blueberry in Maine and Nova Scotia are distinct, but do not represent unique species. No difference in genetic structure was detected between different host tissues or among different host species within the southeastern USA; however, differentiation was detected between populations in Georgia and North Carolina. Overall, E. maculosum showed extreme genetic diversity within the conserved loci with 286 segregating sites among the 1,775 sequenced nucleotides and each isolate representing a unique multilocus haplotype. However, 94% of the nucleotide substitutions were silent, so despite the high number of mutations, selective constraints have limited changes to the amino acid sequences of the housekeeping genes. Overall, these results suggest that the emergence of Exobasidium leaf and fruit spot is not due to a recent introduction or host shift, or the recent evolution of aggressive genotypes of E. maculosum, but more likely as a result of an increasing host population or an environmental change.


Introduction
Many emerging plant diseases are caused by pathogens that have found new hosts or have been introduced to new areas, often as a result of human-mediated movement [1]. Other plant diseases are emerging as a result of the evolution of more aggressive genotypes of the pathogen [2], or genotypes that have evolved to overcome host resistance [3] or resist fungicides or antibiotics [4,5]. However, emerging diseases can also be the result of environmental changes that impact the pathogen's habitat, including changes in climate or host populations [6]. Population genetic studies can elucidate whether emerging pathogens are introduced or native. Invasive populations will often show signatures of a population bottleneck with a reduction in genetic diversity compared to the source population due to founder effects [7,8]. However, a loss of genetic diversity can be moderated by multiple introductions [9,10]. Additionally, pathogens that emerge as the result of a recent adaptation, such as fungicide resistance, often exhibit a reduction in genetic diversity due to positive selection acting on one or a few genotypes that spread rapidly [11]. Conversely, emerging pathogens that result from changing environmental conditions or expanding host populations may not show a reduction in genetic diversity [12], and show signatures of recent population expansions. Causes for disease emergence can be understood by establishing the demographic history and genetic diversity of emerging pathogen populations [13].
Exobasidium leaf and fruit spot of blueberry is an emerging disease that has rapidly increased in prevalence since 2011 throughout the southeastern USA in the commercial blueberry production regions of Georgia, North Carolina, and Mississippi [14,15]. The disease occurs on rabbiteye blueberry (Vaccinium virgatum), highbush blueberry (V. corymbosum) and southern highbush blueberry (V. corymbosum hybrids), but cultivars of rabbiteye blueberry seem to be the most susceptible. The fruit stage of the disease can result in losses of 60-70% in some plantings [16]. The causal pathogen was recently described as a new species, Exobasidium maculosum [14]. Although Exobasidium leaf and fruit spot was first documented in the southeastern USA on highbush blueberry in North Carolina in 1997 [16], it was sporadic and occurred in isolated fields. The factors leading to emergence of this disease in the southeastern USA are not clear. However, a similar Exobasidium leaf spot disease was reported in 1997 on lowbush blueberry (V. angustifolium) in Nova Scotia, Canada [17], and Burt [18] described Exobasidium on lowbush blueberry in New Brunswick, suggesting the presence of the pathogen in northeast North America for at least 100 years [17]. However, E. maculosum populations from the southeastern USA are genetically distinct from populations from lowbush blueberry in northeastern North America based on the large subunit of the rDNA (LSU) [14]; but, reciprocal monophyly between populations, which would provide support for distinct species based on a phylogenetic species recognition concept [19], was not observed. Sequences from additional loci are necessary to use genealogical concordance to identify if these are distinct species or genetically different populations of the same species. Cross-inoculation studies with the genetically distinct populations onto different Vaccinium hosts have not been successful due to difficulty in reproducing disease symptoms [14], so it is difficult to determine if these populations are host specialized or geographically isolated.
The genus Exobasidium includes a diverse group of biotrophic plant pathogens that infect members of the Ericales, including Symplocus, Rhododendron, Camellia, and Vaccinium, including wild and commercial blueberry and cranberry species within Vaccinium section Cyanococcus. Exobasidium species cause a variety of plant deformities including localized leaf and fruit spots, systemic shoot infections characterized by reddened leaves, or tumors (galls) on leaves, stems, flowers, shoots, and buds [16,18,[20][21][22]. Infections can be annual or perennial and local or systemic, with both types of infections occurring on blueberry and cranberry. A felt-like layer that forms on the underside of leaves or on the entire surface of plant organs is an exposed hymenium where the sexual reproductive structures (basidia) and sexually produced spores (basidiospores) are produced. Most members of the genus are dimorphic with a yeastlike growth form in culture and hyphal growth inside plant tissues [23]. Asexual reproduction occurs when yeast-like conidia bud from basidiospores or other conidia. However, basidiospores of some Exobasidium species germinate to produce hyphae in culture [21]. E. maculosum produces annual, localized infections that are characterized by chlorotic, circular, and sunken lesions with white, felt-like spots on the abaxial side. Basidiospores are produced from the felt-like hymenial layer. In culture, basidiospores of E. maculosum bud to form abundant yeast-like conidia [14]. Currently, the lifecycle of E. maculosum and the disease cycle of Exobasidium leaf and fruit spot of blueberry are not well understood.
Our goals are to understand why Exobasidium leaf and fruit spot is emerging in the southeastern USA, to identify factors that may be driving population divergence, and to determine if E. maculosum in the southeastern USA represents a different population or a distinct species from the isolates causing disease on lowbush blueberry in northeastern North America. The objectives of this study were to use a multilocus sequencing approach to estimate genetic diversity in E. maculosum to characterize demographic processes (founder effect vs. population expansion) underlying disease emergence, and to determine if populations are structured based on geography, blueberry host species, or host tissue (leaf or fruit) type.

Fungal isolation and cultures
Symptomatic leaf and fruit tissues infected with E. maculosum were collected from cultivars of rabbiteye blueberry (V. virgatum), highbush blueberry (V. corymbosum) and southern highbush blueberry (V. corymbosum hybrids) from commercial fields in Georgia and North Carolina, USA. Isolates of Exobasidium causing leaf spot on lowbush blueberry (V. angustifolium) and isolates of E. rostrupii causing leaf spot on cranberry (V. macrocarpon) were obtained from infected leaves sent from Maine and New Jersey, USA, respectively. Leaf spots were excised with a sterile scalpel and tissue was affixed to the lid of a Petri dish with petroleum jelly, allowing basidiospores to fall or eject onto potato dextrose agar (PDA). After 8-12 hrs incubation in the dark at 23°C, single basidiospores were collected using a sterile dissecting needle and transferred to a new dish of PDA. Fruit spots were excised and surface sterilized in 10% sodium hypochlorite, plated on PDA, and incubated in the dark at 23°C. Single colony forming units likely derived from a single conidium (yeast cell) of Exobasidium isolates were obtained using a quadrant streaking protocol [24]. Additional isolates of Exobasidium causing leaf spot on lowbush blueberry in Nova Scotia, Canada were obtained from the collection of Nancy Nickerson (Atlantic Food and Horticulture Research Centre, Kentville, Nova Scotia, Canada). For this study there were 82 isolates of E. maculosum from blueberry from the southeastern USA (Georgia and North Carolina), 6 isolates of Exobasidium from lowbush blueberry from northeastern North America (Maine and Nova Scotia), and an isolate of E. rostrupii from cranberry for use as an outgroup for phylogenetic analyses (Table 1). Field studies were conducted on private land with permission granted from the owner or public land where permission was not required because our studies did not involve endangered or protected species. All isolates were stored in 30% glycerol at -80°C.
Mini Kit following the manufacturer's protocol (Qiagen Sciences). Using the standard protocol, approximately 80 to 100 mg (fresh weight) of yeast cells were incubated in lysis buffer (50 mm EDTA pH 8, 100 mm Tris pH 8, 3.5% SDS, 250 μg/mL proteinase K, 1% sodium bisulfate) for 15 min at 65°C. After centrifugation for 5 min at 12,200 rpm, 200 μL 7.5 m ammonium acetate was added to the supernatant, vortexed, placed on ice for 15 min, then centrifuged again for 3 min. The supernatant was precipitated with isopropanol and the pellet was rinsed twice with 70% ethanol, dried and resuspended in H 2 O.

Identification of conserved regions, coding regions, and synonymous and nonsynonymous substitutions
For E. maculosum and E. rostrupii sequences, the conserved 5.8S region of the ITS rDNA and coding regions of CAL and EF-1α were identified by aligning a representative sequence of each region by BLAST in the NCBI database (http://blast.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/Blast.cgi). Searches were made using the blastn (for ITS) and blastx (for CAL and EF-1α) algorithms that search a nucleotide database and a protein database using a translated nucleotide query, respectively. The two best fungal species hits were aligned to each gene region and used to identify the conserved or coding regions for each locus. For EF-1α and CAL, translation of the coding regions was performed in Geneious v6. For the entire E. maculosum population, the number of segregating sites in each locus, the number of substitutions in the 5.8S rDNA, the number of synonymous substitutions and nonsynonymous substitutions in coding regions of EF-1α and CAL, and d N / d S ratios for EF-1α and CAL were determined in DnaSP v5 [28].

Phylogenetic analyses
Phylogenies were inferred for each locus using maximum likelihood (ML) in PAUP Ã 4b v10 [29] and Bayesian inference (BI) in MrBayes v3.0 [30]. E. rostrupii was used as the outgroup. DT-ModSel [31] was used to estimate the best-fit nucleotide substitution models for each dataset. Robustness and support for clades for the ML phylogeny were assessed using 200 bootstraps. The Shimodaira-Hasegawa (SH) tests of topological congruence were conducted on the ML phylogenies as implemented in PAUP with RELL 1000 resampling replicates using modified datasets to include 76 isolates that contained data for all three gene regions that were included in the combined dataset and E. rostrupii. BI was performed with parameter settings suggested by the best-fit nucleotide substitution models. The Markov chain Monte Carlo (MCMC) search was run with four chains for 3,000,000 generations generating 30,001 trees; the first 6,000 trees were discarded as "burn-in" of the chains.

Haplotype network, nucleotide diversity, and tests of neutrality and recombination
Haplotype networks were constructed for each locus using parsimony in the program TCS v1.21 with a 92% similarity cutoff [32]. Isolates were assigned to populations based on geographic origin including: Exobasidium from Maine and Nova Scotia (northeastern North America or NE), E. maculosum from Georgia and North Carolina (southeastern USA or SE), E. maculosum from Georgia (GA), E. maculosum from North Carolina (NC), and E. maculosum and Exobasidium from lowbush blueberry (NE+SE). The number of unique haplotypes, haplotype diversity (h D ), pairwise nucleotide diversity (π) [33], Watterson's Theta (θ w ) [34], and the number of segregating sites (S) for each locus and the combined dataset in each population separately (NE, SE, GA, NC) and in the total population (Total) were estimated. Neutrality of each locus was estimated by Tajima's D [35] and Fu and Li's F [36] in DnaSP v5. Permutation tests, with 1000 randomizations, were used to test for significant departures from neutrality [37]. The minimum number of recombination events [38] that occurred for each locus and for the combined dataset within each geographically assigned population, were estimated using coalescent simulations within DnaSP v5.

Divergence among populations
Two measures of genetic differentiation, K ST Ã [39] and S nn [40] were used to determine if populations were structured by geographic origin (NE, n = 4; SE, n = 72; NC, n = 12; GA, n = 60), original host within the southeastern USA (rabbiteye, n = 57; southern highbush, n = 13; highbush, n = 2), or tissue type (fruit, n = 9 or leaf, n = 63, excluding NE isolates). The statistics were determined using the combined loci dataset. K ST Ã is estimated by determining the proportion of genetic diversity within populations compared to the diversity in the total population. Hudson's nearest-neighbor statistic (S nn ) is a measure of how frequently the most similar sequence or "nearest neighbor" is from the same assigned population. S nn approaches one when populations are highly differentiated and near one-half when populations are panmictic [40]. Significance for both tests was estimated by 1000 permutations of the data as implemented in DnaSP v5.

Genetic diversity
A total of 1775 nucleotides were sequenced for 82 isolates of E. maculosum from the southeastern USA, 6 isolates from V. angustifolium in northeastern North America, and an isolate of E. rostrupii from V. macrocarpon (cranberry) collected from New Jersey, USA that was used as an outgroup. Haplotype diversity (h D ) was very high across all loci for all populations. In the combined dataset, each of the 76 isolates had unique multilocus haplotypes with a haplotype diversity (h D ) of 1.00 ( Table 2). The most diverse locus for the total population was EF-1α with nucleotide diversity (π) of 0.024 and 182 segregating sites among the 949 sequenced nucleotides (Table 2). However, CAL and ITS provided similar levels of diversity for the total population with π of 0.022 and 0.012, respectively. Significant levels of recombination were detected for EF-1α, with a minimum of 42 unique events (R min ) occurring within the entire population. Lower levels of recombination were observed for ITS and CAL with 7 and 8 unique recombination events occurring within the combined population, respectively.

Signatures of purifying selection
Tajima's D and Fu and Li's F were estimated for ITS, EF-1α, and CAL (Table 2)   gracile (e value: 1 × 10 −170 , Genbank: ABG53988). Only two non-parsimonious segregating sites were observed within the 5.8S region among all isolates. The putative coding regions and translated amino acid sequences of E. rhododendri and E. gracile were used to determine the putative coding regions and amino acid sequence of EF-1α for E. maculosum. Out of the total 182 segregating sites within the coding region, 176 were synonymous, and only 6 resulted in an amino acid change (S1 Fig). Further, the putative coding regions and translated amino acid sequences of CAL from Mortierella verticillata (e-value: 7 × 10 −27 , Genbank: KFH70124) and Rhizoctonia solani AG-3 (e-value: 31 × 10 −27 , Genbank: EUC57218) were used to identify the putative coding regions and amino acid sequence for CAL in E. maculosum. Out of 40 segregating sites in the coding region, only 8 resulted in amino acid changes. The d N /d S ratios for EF-1α and CAL were 0.03 and 0.20, respectively, which indicates that although nucleotide diversity is high, purifying selection is acting on these genes to conserve the amino acid sequence of the proteins.

Phylogenetic analyses
To determine if the Exobasidium population from lowbush blueberry in northeastern North America represents a distinct species, ML and BI phylogenies were generated for each of the three loci. The best-fit model of DNA evolution for ITS and EF-1α was equal-frequency Tamura-Nei with invariable sites and a gamma distribution (TrNef+I+G) [41], and for CAL was the generalized time reversible with a gamma distribution (GTR+G) [42]. Based on the results of the SH tests, the gene tree topologies were incongruent (P = 0.001), thus loci were not combined for phylogenetic analyses. For ITS, isolates from lowbush blueberry in northeastern North America (NE) clustered in a well-supported clade with 0.99 posterior probability (pp) and 100% bootstrap support (bs); however, two isolates from Georgia (GA) also clustered with this group (Fig 1A). Additionally, this clade was nested within a larger clade including most of the isolates from the southeastern USA (SE) making the SE population paraphyletic. For EF-1α, NE isolates formed a well-supported monophyletic clade (0.99 pp and 100% bs) (Fig 1B). For CAL, NE isolates were polyphyletic (Fig 1C). Only the EF-1α locus showed reciprocal monophyly for the NE and SE populations. Clade placement across loci was inconsistent among the SE isolates as well, indicating signatures of recombination or incomplete lineage sorting. For example, isolates FS2-4, NCLC1-35, NCLC1-14, NCLC1-15, and FP2-2 formed a well-supported clade for ITS, but these isolates were not clustered for EF-1α or CAL (Fig 1). Further, no consistent clustering occurred across all three loci for isolates collected from leaf or fruit spots, or from isolates collected from similar hosts (rabbiteye, southern highbush, and highbush). However, for ITS and EF-1α isolates from lowbush blueberry (NE) clustered into a single clade (Fig 1).
Abundant reticulation was present in the haplotype networks for all three loci, indicating recurrent recombination among the SE isolates. For CAL, reticulation was observed among isolates from the NE and SE indicating contemporary or historical recombination (Fig 2C). Estimates of minimal recombination events (R min ) indicated recombination between the NE and SE populations within each locus (R min = 42 and 8 for EF-1α and CAL, respectively) and within the combined dataset (R min = 58). There was also extensive recombination within each population (NE, SE, GA, and NC) for each locus and the combined dataset (Table 2).

Discussion
The extremely high genetic diversity observed for E. maculosum is uncommon for fungi and unexpected for an emerging pathogen. The two factors contributing to high genetic diversity include a high population mutation rate (θ W = 0.031 for the combined dataset in the total population) and a high level of recombination within and among loci (R min = 57 for the combined  dataset in the total population). Within ITS, we identified 77 segregating sites for E. maculosum, whereas there are very few, if any, segregating sites for the ITS region for most fungal species [43,44]. In fact, ITS shows such little variation within most species of fungi that it was selected as the barcode sequence to identify individuals to the species level [45]. Though few examples exist, high diversity within ITS was observed for populations of the amphibian chytridiomycosis fungus, Batrachochytrium dendrobatidis, collected from South Korea and other parts of Asia where at least 50 ITS haplotypes have been identified [46]. Similar to ITS, we found uncommonly high genetic diversity for E. maculosum within the housekeeping genes EF-1α and CAL. Although the sequences were diverse, we found purifying selection was acting within the coding regions. Historically, synonymous substitutions that do not change the amino acid sequence of proteins were thought to have no functional consequences, and thus were neutral and of little biological significance [47]. Recent research has shown, however, that synonymous mutations can impact cellular processes including gene regulation, mRNA structure and processing, and protein synthesis, conformation and functionality [48]. Synonymous substitution rates can be locus specific, driven by changes in adaptive or relaxed selection affecting certain genes [49]. Selection, mutation, and drift can act on synonymous sites altering codon usage patterns of genes within an organism [50]. Mechanisms including faulty DNA repair machinery or repeat-induced point mutation (RIP) could be the source of the high diversity we observe in E. maculosum populations [51,52]. With the limited loci sequenced here it is not possible to tease apart the mechanism(s); however, genomic and population genomic tools will allow us to search the E. maculosum genome for the presence of DNA repair and RIP machinery and to identify if this high level of diversity occurs within segments of the genome or whether it is widespread. The extreme genetic diversity we observe in E. maculosum indicates that the species has a high evolutionary potential providing it with an adaptive advantage [53].
In addition to a high population mutation rate, recombination contributes to the high genetic diversity in E. maculosum. The number of recombination events that occurred both within and among loci for the entire population suggests that E. maculosum populations are outcrossing. Most Exobasidium species produce both sexually-derived basidiospores, through a thick-walled basidium that is formed on the tissues of their hosts, and asexually-derived, yeast-like conidia [54]. Sundström [55] showed that within the genus Exobasidium some species have a homothallic, or self-compatible, mating system, rather than a heterothallic, or  Diversity of Exobasidium maculosum self-incompatible, mating system. Single-conidial isolates of E. vaccinii and E. japonicum inoculated onto V. vitis-idaea and Azalea indices, respectively, formed the sexually derived basidia and basidiospores [55,56]. However, it is not currently known if all species within Exobasidium are homothallic. We know that E. maculosum undergoes sexual reproduction because it produces basidia and basidiospores [14,16], but we hypothesize that the high levels of recombination and genotypic diversity are the result of outcrossing within populations. However, successful inoculations of single-conidial isolates onto blueberry hosts and a better understanding of the lifecycle will help determine if E. maculosum is homothallic or heterothallic, as fungi with both homothallic and heterothallic mating systems have the ability to outcross [57,58]. Exobasidium species have been studied primarily at the genus level using morphological and molecular systematics [22,54,59,60]. To our knowledge this is the first study of an Exobasidium species at the population level, which has allowed for a better examination of the phylogeography and evolutionary history of E. maculosum. One aim of this research was to understand why Exobasidium leaf and fruit spot is emerging on commercial blueberry in the southeastern USA. Often, emerging diseases arise when pathogen populations become more aggressive, are found on novel hosts, or occur in new geographic locations [61]. When disease emergence results from the introduction of a pathogen into a new area or the development of novel genotypes, typically pathogen populations exhibit low genetic diversity or few genetically diverse non-recombining haplotypes [62]. In populations of E. maculosum, haplotype diversity reached the highest value possible (h D = 1) with each isolate represented by a unique multilocus haplotype, demonstrating extremely high genetic diversity [63]. These results suggest that the emergence of Exobasidium leaf and fruit spot within the southeastern USA is not the result of a recently introduced population or the evolution of a more aggressive genotype. Rather, this high genetic diversity suggests that large populations of E. maculosum have been established in the southeastern USA for much longer than the recent emergence. Additionally, the geographic population structure detected within the southeastern USA suggests that E. maculosum has had a historical presence in this region. Causes for the recent emergence of this disease are not clear, but could be the result of increasing populations of blueberry hosts within North Carolina and Georgia. Acreage of commercial blueberry plantings within the southeastern USA has increased rapidly within the last 15 years. In 1999, the area of harvested blueberry in Georgia was 4,400 ha and increased to 5,463 ha in 2013, with a similar trend occurring in North Carolina (National Agricultural Statistics Service 1999, 2014). Another explanation for disease emergence is a change in the environment, such as increasing winter temperatures or greater precipitation. Since E. maculosum can exist in a yeast form, populations could have persisted for years on the leaf phylloplane or as endophytes of Vaccinium hosts without causing symptoms, but became pathogenic when environmental or host plant conditions became conducive. This switch from non-pathogen to pathogen has been hypothesized for fungi that are able to exist as both endophytes and pathogens, such as those collected from grasses [64,65].
To better understand the demographic history of this pathogen, we used the neutrality estimates Tajima's D and Fu and Li's F to determine if populations had undergone population bottlenecks or expansions. In populations where bottlenecks have occurred, there is a reduction in low-frequency polymorphisms that generates positive Tajima's D values [66,67], whereas in populations that have recently expanded, values of Tajima's D and Fu and Li's F will be significantly negative across multiple loci, which is caused by an excess of recent mutations that produce a star phylogeny [68,69]. Tajima's D and Fu and Li's F estimates showed no evidence for population bottlenecks or expansions in E. maculosum as most estimates did not significantly deviate from neutrality. It has been shown, however, that inferring demographic history in the presence of mutation rate heterogeneity is difficult [70]. Overall, these results suggest that the population size of E. maculosum has remained constant further supporting our conclusion that disease emergence is the result of an environmental change or a change in the host population.
Exobasidium leaf and fruit spot disease is found in the eastern Canadian provinces of Nova Scotia, New Brunswick, Quebec, and Ontario [17] and Maine, USA on V. angustifolium and in the southeastern USA on commercially produced blueberry hosts including V. virgatum, V. corymbosum, and V. corymbosum hybrids [14]. Exobasidium collected from V. angustifolium in northeastern North America and E. maculosum from commercial species in the southeastern USA were genetically distinct [14], but it was not previously clear if these represented distinct species. The genealogical concordance phylogenetic species recognition (GCPSR) concept [19] is increasingly being employed to determine species groups among closely-related basidiomycete fungi [71][72][73][74]. Using GCPSR as our species concept, the lack of reciprocal monophyly for most gene trees for populations from northeastern North America (NE) and populations from the southeastern USA (SE) showed that these are genetically distinct populations of E. maculosum, but not distinct species. Well-supported reciprocal monophyly of the NE population was observed for EF-1α but not for CAL or ITS, possibly due to incomplete lineage sorting or hybridization. The haplotype network for CAL showed reticulation between the NE and SE population suggesting historic or contemporary recombination. Ongoing gene flow between populations may be preventing speciation between the populations, or the populations are undergoing speciation or have recently speciated, but not enough time has passed for reciprocal monophyly to occur for the majority of gene trees.
To better understand the emergence and spread of this disease we determined if populations of E. maculosum were genetically structured by original blueberry host species, host tissue (leaf or fruit), or geography. We found that the main driver of population structure in E. maculosum is geography. Within the southeastern USA, genetic differentiation was not detected based on original blueberry host species or host tissue type suggesting that these factors are not driving population structure. This is also supported by the gene trees and haplotype networks. However, significant differentiation was detected between E. maculosum populations from northeastern North America and the southeastern USA. The genetic structure between these populations was suggested by previous results [14]. Differences in blueberry host species in these regions could be contributing to population structure, but this is not clear because geography and host species are confounded when comparing northeastern North America and southeastern USA populations of E. maculosum. All isolates from northeastern North America were collected from lowbush blueberry (V. angustifolium), which is genetically distinct from the blueberry species sampled in the southeastern USA [75,76]. Interestingly, K ST Ã was significant between E. maculosum isolates from Georgia and North Carolina suggesting that geography is a main driver for population divergence within the southeastern USA and that there is limited dispersal of E. maculosum between these regions. Annis and J. Polashock for supplying Exobasidium isolates. This work was supported by grants from the Georgia Blueberry Commission and Southern Region Small Fruit Consortium.