4.7 Article

Plant Host Species and Geographic Distance Affect the Structure of Aboveground Fungal Symbiont Communities, and Environmental Filtering Affects Belowground Communities in a Coastal Dune Ecosystem

Journal

MICROBIAL ECOLOGY
Volume 71, Issue 4, Pages 912-926

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00248-015-0712-6

Keywords

Endophyte; Community assembly; Environmental drivers; Dunes; Ammophila; Spatial structure

Funding

  1. United States Environmental Protection Agency [EPA/NCER R833836]
  2. NSF Dimensions of Biodiversity [1045608]
  3. National Science Foundation Integrative Graduate Education and Research Traineeship (NSF-IGERT) Introduced Species and Genotypes program [DGE-0653827]
  4. NSF Graduate Research Fellowship program [NSF 00039202]
  5. University of Minnesota Rothman Fellowship
  6. Direct For Biological Sciences
  7. Division Of Environmental Biology [1045608] Funding Source: National Science Foundation

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Microbial symbionts inhabit tissues of all plants and animals. Their community composition depends largely on two ecological processes: (1) filtering by abiotic conditions and host species determining the environments that symbionts are able to colonize and (2) dispersal-limitation determining the pool of symbionts available to colonize a given host and community spatial structure. In plants, the above- and belowground tissues represent such distinct habitats for symbionts that we expect different effects of filtering and spatial structuring on their symbiont communities. In this study, we characterized above- and belowground communities of fungal endophytes-fungi living asymptomatically within plants-to understand the contributions of filtering and spatial structure to endophyte community composition. We used a culture-based approach to characterize endophytes growing in leaves and roots of three species of coastal beachgrasses in dunes of the USA Pacific Northwest. For leaves, endophyte isolation frequency and OTU richness depended primarily on plant host species. In comparison, for roots, both isolation frequency and OTU richness increased from the nutrient-poor front of the dune to the higher-nutrient backdune. Endophyte community composition in leaves exhibited a distance-decay relationship across the region. In a laboratory assay, faster growth rates and lower spore production were more often associated with leaf- than root-inhabiting endophytes. Overall, our results reveal a greater importance of biotic filtering by host species and dispersal-limitation over regional geographic distances for aboveground leaf endophyte communities and stronger effects of abiotic environmental filtering and locally patchy distributions for belowground root endophyte communities.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.7
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available