4.2 Article

Further evidence of Ceratobasidium DP Rogers (Basidiomycota) serving as the ubiquitous fungal associate of Platanthera leucophaea (Orchidaceae) in the North American tallgrass prairie

Journal

BOTANICAL STUDIES
Volume 61, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1186/s40529-020-00289-z

Keywords

Specificity; Conservation; Endophytes; Mycorrhizal fungi; Tulasnella

Categories

Funding

  1. U.S. Forest Service [30181AG081]
  2. McHenry County Conservation District
  3. Prairie State Orchid Society
  4. Illinois Orchid Society
  5. Southern Illinois University-Edwardsville Research Grants for Graduate Students (RGGS)
  6. Illinois State Academy of Science Botany Division Travel Grant

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Background In the United States and Canada, ca. one-half of native orchid species are now threatened with extinction. A number of these species are restricted to tallgrass prairies of central North America, such as the Eastern Prairie Fringed Orchid, Platanthera leucophaea (Nutt.) Lindl.-a U.S. Federally threatened species. Results We provide new records of fungi recovered from roots of P. leucophaea and five other orchid species inhabiting prairie sites in Illinois and neighboring states during a 10-year period (2008-2017). A total of 39 fungal endophytes were isolated from Cypripedium candidum (1), Platanthera lacera (1), P. leucophaea (32), P. peramoena (3), Spiranthes lacera (1), and S. magnicamporum (1), 31 (79%) of which were assignable to Ceratobasidium and the remainder to Tulasnella. These fungi were acquired from 16 different sites, 13 of which are new records including two new state records (Iowa, Wisconsin). Molecular analysis revealed that some Ceratobasidium strains were virtually identical despite being geographically isolated by > 300 km. Conclusions This study, encompassing a decade of work, confirms that Platanthera leucophaea is a mycorrhizal specialist with heavy reliance on Ceratobasidium with the tallgrass prairie ecosystem of North America. Our isolation of Ceratobasidium from P. leucophaea spanning additional sites suggests that the association is widespread. Such information should provide conservationists and land managers with more confidence in developing protocols that facilitate the long-term conservation of this prairie orchid.

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