About this Research Topic
Our ability to predict the impacts of interactions between biotic agents and climate change is currently very limited, and has important implications for managing increasingly disturbed forests (both natural forest ecosystems and plantation forestry). Accumulating research of environmental effects on interaction of trees, pests and pathogens suggests that there is an urgent need for systems-based research to investigate both longstanding and novel biotic interactions. More specifically, it is crucial to record changes in forest pest population dynamics, address the factors that trigger their outbreaks and analyze the development of forest tree disease epidemics, as well as changes in tree susceptibility and resilience under a changing climate. Recent research has started to address these questions, and this Research Topic aims to contribute to the emerging field of climate change research.
This Research Topic will encompass ongoing research to meet these challenges and welcomes outstanding contributions addressing multifaceted effects of climate changes on forest pests and pathogens and their interactions with forest plants. Emphasis will be given to empirical research and novel methods papers, and will also include Reviews and Opinion articles to consolidate this topic and guide future research priorities.
Keywords: Climate Change, Multifaceted Interactions, Host-Pathogen Dynamics, Forest Disease, Pest Damage, Host Resistance
Important Note: All contributions to this Research Topic must be within the scope of the section and journal to which they are submitted, as defined in their mission statements. Frontiers reserves the right to guide an out-of-scope manuscript to a more suitable section or journal at any stage of peer review.