4.5 Article

Late Quaternary climate change explains soil fungal community composition rather than fungal richness in forest ecosystems

Journal

ECOLOGY AND EVOLUTION
Volume 9, Issue 11, Pages 6678-6692

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/ece3.5247

Keywords

contemporary environmental factors; forest ecosystems; Illumina MiSeq sequencing; late Quaternary climate change; soil fungal community

Funding

  1. Strategic Priority Research Program of the Chinese Academy of Sciences [XDB31000000]
  2. Biological Resources Service Network Initiative of the Chinese Academy of Sciences [ZSSD-015]
  3. National Project on Scientific Groundwork [2014FY210400]
  4. National Natural Science Foundation of China [31210103910, 31470545]

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The dramatic climate fluctuations of the late Quaternary have influenced the diversity and composition of macroorganism communities, but how they structure belowground microbial communities is less well known. Fungi constitute an important component of soil microorganism communities. They play an important role in biodiversity maintenance, community assembly, and ecosystem functioning, and differ from many macroorganisms in many traits. Here, we examined soil fungal communities in Chinese temperate, subtropical, and tropic forests using Illumina MiSeq sequencing of the fungal ITS1 region. The relative effect of late Quaternary climate change and contemporary environment (plant, soil, current climate, and geographic distance) on the soil fungal community was analyzed. The richness of the total fungal community, along with saprotrophic, ectomycorrhizal (EM), and pathogenic fungal communities, was influenced primarily by the contemporary environment (plant and/or soil) but not by late Quaternary climate change. Late Quaternary climate change acted in concert with the contemporary environment to shape total, saprotrophic, EM, and pathogenic fungal community compositions and with a stronger effect in temperate forest than in tropic-subtropical forest ecosystems. Some contemporary environmental factors influencing total, saprotrophic, EM, and pathogenic fungal communities in temperate and tropic-subtropical forests were different. We demonstrate that late Quaternary climate change can help to explain current soil fungal community composition and argue that climatic legacies can help to predict soil fungal responses to climate change.

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