Geo-metagenomics: deciphering the spatial biodiversity of ssDNA viruses associated with Western Cape and Camargue agroecosystems

Over the past three years we have developed a geometagenomics approach which, based on the sampling design and the depth of sampling, enables the quantitative ecosystem-scale evaluation of spatial variations in, viral demographics, host distributions, and gene-flow. The approach is particularly well suited to analysing viral dynamics in ecosystem perturbations. The geometagenomics approach can precisely link individual sequence reads from bulked mixed sequencing reactions to information on abiotic and biotic conditions of the samples from which the sequences were obtained, the plant hosts from which samples were collected and the spatial arrangement of the samples. Our experimental design sampling locations are systematically placed within a predefined grid; the location of which is placed according to available geographic information systems data. This a priori choice of the sampling points allows the identification of reference ecosystems that should be appropriate for determining, for example, the impacts of agriculture on viral demographics and evolution within natural endangered ecosystems or the transmission rates of viruses between wild and cultivated plants. Our study was conducted in the Western Cape (South Africa) and Camargue (France) regions, which include wild areas, including renosterveld shrubland and strandveld shrubland besides wide fertile plains under introduced crops such as barley, wheat and wine in South Africa and sansouires, marshes and meadows surrounded by areas under intensive agriculture such as rice and wheat in Camargue. Besides determining the spatial and host distributions of various groups of both known and previously unknown ssDNA viruses, we compare the ssDNA species richness of the various wild and cultivated sampling locations. Amongst a large number of apparently novel single stranded DNA viruses, was one in South Africa belonging to a new Geminivirus genus that we have tentatively named, Capulavirus. (Texte intégral)

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Bernardo, Pauline, Ortet, Philippe, Barakat, Mohamed, Rebelo, Anthony, Cousins, Stephen, Fernandez, Emmanuel, Mesleard, François, Peterschmitt, Michel, Filloux, Denis, Varsani, Arvind, Martin, Darren Patrick, Roumagnac, Philippe
Format: conference_item biblioteca
Language:eng
Published: s.n.
Subjects:H20 - Maladies des plantes, U30 - Méthodes de recherche,
Online Access:http://agritrop.cirad.fr/573436/
http://agritrop.cirad.fr/573436/1/document_573436.pdf
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
id dig-cirad-fr-573436
record_format koha
spelling dig-cirad-fr-5734362021-01-04T12:19:59Z http://agritrop.cirad.fr/573436/ http://agritrop.cirad.fr/573436/ Geo-metagenomics: deciphering the spatial biodiversity of ssDNA viruses associated with Western Cape and Camargue agroecosystems. Bernardo Pauline, Ortet Philippe, Barakat Mohamed, Rebelo Anthony, Cousins Stephen, Fernandez Emmanuel, Mesleard François, Peterschmitt Michel, Filloux Denis, Varsani Arvind, Martin Darren Patrick, Roumagnac Philippe. 2013. In : 7th International Geminvirus Symposium and 5th International ssDNA Comparative Virology Workshop, Hangzhou, China, November 3-9, 2013. s.l. : s.n., Résumé, 1 p. International Geminvirus Symposium. 7, Hangzhou, Chine, 3 Novembre 2013/9 Novembre 2013. Researchers Geo-metagenomics: deciphering the spatial biodiversity of ssDNA viruses associated with Western Cape and Camargue agroecosystems Bernardo, Pauline Ortet, Philippe Barakat, Mohamed Rebelo, Anthony Cousins, Stephen Fernandez, Emmanuel Mesleard, François Peterschmitt, Michel Filloux, Denis Varsani, Arvind Martin, Darren Patrick Roumagnac, Philippe eng 2013 s.n. 7th International Geminvirus Symposium and 5th International ssDNA Comparative Virology Workshop, Hangzhou, China, November 3-9, 2013 H20 - Maladies des plantes U30 - Méthodes de recherche Over the past three years we have developed a geometagenomics approach which, based on the sampling design and the depth of sampling, enables the quantitative ecosystem-scale evaluation of spatial variations in, viral demographics, host distributions, and gene-flow. The approach is particularly well suited to analysing viral dynamics in ecosystem perturbations. The geometagenomics approach can precisely link individual sequence reads from bulked mixed sequencing reactions to information on abiotic and biotic conditions of the samples from which the sequences were obtained, the plant hosts from which samples were collected and the spatial arrangement of the samples. Our experimental design sampling locations are systematically placed within a predefined grid; the location of which is placed according to available geographic information systems data. This a priori choice of the sampling points allows the identification of reference ecosystems that should be appropriate for determining, for example, the impacts of agriculture on viral demographics and evolution within natural endangered ecosystems or the transmission rates of viruses between wild and cultivated plants. Our study was conducted in the Western Cape (South Africa) and Camargue (France) regions, which include wild areas, including renosterveld shrubland and strandveld shrubland besides wide fertile plains under introduced crops such as barley, wheat and wine in South Africa and sansouires, marshes and meadows surrounded by areas under intensive agriculture such as rice and wheat in Camargue. Besides determining the spatial and host distributions of various groups of both known and previously unknown ssDNA viruses, we compare the ssDNA species richness of the various wild and cultivated sampling locations. Amongst a large number of apparently novel single stranded DNA viruses, was one in South Africa belonging to a new Geminivirus genus that we have tentatively named, Capulavirus. (Texte intégral) conference_item info:eu-repo/semantics/conferenceObject Conference info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion http://agritrop.cirad.fr/573436/1/document_573436.pdf application/pdf Cirad license info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess https://agritrop.cirad.fr/mention_legale.html
institution CIRAD FR
collection DSpace
country Francia
countrycode FR
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
databasecode dig-cirad-fr
tag biblioteca
region Europa del Oeste
libraryname Biblioteca del CIRAD Francia
language eng
topic H20 - Maladies des plantes
U30 - Méthodes de recherche
H20 - Maladies des plantes
U30 - Méthodes de recherche
spellingShingle H20 - Maladies des plantes
U30 - Méthodes de recherche
H20 - Maladies des plantes
U30 - Méthodes de recherche
Bernardo, Pauline
Ortet, Philippe
Barakat, Mohamed
Rebelo, Anthony
Cousins, Stephen
Fernandez, Emmanuel
Mesleard, François
Peterschmitt, Michel
Filloux, Denis
Varsani, Arvind
Martin, Darren Patrick
Roumagnac, Philippe
Geo-metagenomics: deciphering the spatial biodiversity of ssDNA viruses associated with Western Cape and Camargue agroecosystems
description Over the past three years we have developed a geometagenomics approach which, based on the sampling design and the depth of sampling, enables the quantitative ecosystem-scale evaluation of spatial variations in, viral demographics, host distributions, and gene-flow. The approach is particularly well suited to analysing viral dynamics in ecosystem perturbations. The geometagenomics approach can precisely link individual sequence reads from bulked mixed sequencing reactions to information on abiotic and biotic conditions of the samples from which the sequences were obtained, the plant hosts from which samples were collected and the spatial arrangement of the samples. Our experimental design sampling locations are systematically placed within a predefined grid; the location of which is placed according to available geographic information systems data. This a priori choice of the sampling points allows the identification of reference ecosystems that should be appropriate for determining, for example, the impacts of agriculture on viral demographics and evolution within natural endangered ecosystems or the transmission rates of viruses between wild and cultivated plants. Our study was conducted in the Western Cape (South Africa) and Camargue (France) regions, which include wild areas, including renosterveld shrubland and strandveld shrubland besides wide fertile plains under introduced crops such as barley, wheat and wine in South Africa and sansouires, marshes and meadows surrounded by areas under intensive agriculture such as rice and wheat in Camargue. Besides determining the spatial and host distributions of various groups of both known and previously unknown ssDNA viruses, we compare the ssDNA species richness of the various wild and cultivated sampling locations. Amongst a large number of apparently novel single stranded DNA viruses, was one in South Africa belonging to a new Geminivirus genus that we have tentatively named, Capulavirus. (Texte intégral)
format conference_item
topic_facet H20 - Maladies des plantes
U30 - Méthodes de recherche
author Bernardo, Pauline
Ortet, Philippe
Barakat, Mohamed
Rebelo, Anthony
Cousins, Stephen
Fernandez, Emmanuel
Mesleard, François
Peterschmitt, Michel
Filloux, Denis
Varsani, Arvind
Martin, Darren Patrick
Roumagnac, Philippe
author_facet Bernardo, Pauline
Ortet, Philippe
Barakat, Mohamed
Rebelo, Anthony
Cousins, Stephen
Fernandez, Emmanuel
Mesleard, François
Peterschmitt, Michel
Filloux, Denis
Varsani, Arvind
Martin, Darren Patrick
Roumagnac, Philippe
author_sort Bernardo, Pauline
title Geo-metagenomics: deciphering the spatial biodiversity of ssDNA viruses associated with Western Cape and Camargue agroecosystems
title_short Geo-metagenomics: deciphering the spatial biodiversity of ssDNA viruses associated with Western Cape and Camargue agroecosystems
title_full Geo-metagenomics: deciphering the spatial biodiversity of ssDNA viruses associated with Western Cape and Camargue agroecosystems
title_fullStr Geo-metagenomics: deciphering the spatial biodiversity of ssDNA viruses associated with Western Cape and Camargue agroecosystems
title_full_unstemmed Geo-metagenomics: deciphering the spatial biodiversity of ssDNA viruses associated with Western Cape and Camargue agroecosystems
title_sort geo-metagenomics: deciphering the spatial biodiversity of ssdna viruses associated with western cape and camargue agroecosystems
publisher s.n.
url http://agritrop.cirad.fr/573436/
http://agritrop.cirad.fr/573436/1/document_573436.pdf
work_keys_str_mv AT bernardopauline geometagenomicsdecipheringthespatialbiodiversityofssdnavirusesassociatedwithwesterncapeandcamargueagroecosystems
AT ortetphilippe geometagenomicsdecipheringthespatialbiodiversityofssdnavirusesassociatedwithwesterncapeandcamargueagroecosystems
AT barakatmohamed geometagenomicsdecipheringthespatialbiodiversityofssdnavirusesassociatedwithwesterncapeandcamargueagroecosystems
AT rebeloanthony geometagenomicsdecipheringthespatialbiodiversityofssdnavirusesassociatedwithwesterncapeandcamargueagroecosystems
AT cousinsstephen geometagenomicsdecipheringthespatialbiodiversityofssdnavirusesassociatedwithwesterncapeandcamargueagroecosystems
AT fernandezemmanuel geometagenomicsdecipheringthespatialbiodiversityofssdnavirusesassociatedwithwesterncapeandcamargueagroecosystems
AT mesleardfrancois geometagenomicsdecipheringthespatialbiodiversityofssdnavirusesassociatedwithwesterncapeandcamargueagroecosystems
AT peterschmittmichel geometagenomicsdecipheringthespatialbiodiversityofssdnavirusesassociatedwithwesterncapeandcamargueagroecosystems
AT fillouxdenis geometagenomicsdecipheringthespatialbiodiversityofssdnavirusesassociatedwithwesterncapeandcamargueagroecosystems
AT varsaniarvind geometagenomicsdecipheringthespatialbiodiversityofssdnavirusesassociatedwithwesterncapeandcamargueagroecosystems
AT martindarrenpatrick geometagenomicsdecipheringthespatialbiodiversityofssdnavirusesassociatedwithwesterncapeandcamargueagroecosystems
AT roumagnacphilippe geometagenomicsdecipheringthespatialbiodiversityofssdnavirusesassociatedwithwesterncapeandcamargueagroecosystems
_version_ 1758024181049458688