Originally posted by Marcher
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There are various ways a tree can resist diseases.
1.
Antifungal chemical produced by the tree.
2.
Unusually thick/tough bark, skin or leaf surface.
3.
High vigour to simply outgrow the problem.
However, whatever the mechanism of "resistance" to a pest or disease, the diseases will be producing their own unique genetic combinations each year in the hope that one or two of those fungal spores produced will be better than its parents at attacking a nearby tree.
When I used to work in a microbiology lab, I actually saw hospital-specific strains of bacteria which were incapable of growing without antibiotic treatment; these bugs had, perversely, become "addicted" to antibiotics (the very drugs we would use to try to kill them!). We could only get them to grow by feeding them the very antibiotics that doctors would have tried to use to treat the infection in the first place.
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