4.8 Article

Declining fungal diversity in Arctic freshwaters along a permafrost thaw gradient

Journal

GLOBAL CHANGE BIOLOGY
Volume 27, Issue 22, Pages 5889-5906

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/gcb.15852

Keywords

aquatic fungi; Arctic; dissolved organic matter; fungal diversity; permafrost thaw; thermokarst ponds

Funding

  1. Science for Life Laboratory
  2. INTERACT

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Climate change-driven permafrost thaw has a significant impact on pan-Arctic regions, leading to the formation of thermokarst ponds. The degradation of permafrost has a strong negative impact on aquatic fungal diversity, likely due to interactions with the released carbon pool from ancient deposits. This is expected to have implications for carbon cycling and climate feedback loops in the rapidly warming Arctic.
Climate change-driven permafrost thaw has a strong influence on pan-Arctic regions, via, for example, the formation of thermokarst ponds. These ponds are hotspots of microbial carbon cycling and greenhouse gas production, and efforts have been put on disentangling the role of bacteria and archaea in recycling the increasing amounts of carbon arriving to the ponds from degrading watersheds. However, despite the well-established role of fungi in carbon cycling in the terrestrial environments, the interactions between permafrost thaw and fungal communities in Arctic freshwaters have remained unknown. We integrated data from 60 ponds in Arctic hydro-ecosystems, representing a gradient of permafrost integrity and spanning over five regions, namely Alaska, Greenland, Canada, Sweden, and Western Siberia. The results revealed that differences in pH and organic matter quality and availability were linked to distinct fungal community compositions and that a large fraction of the community represented unknown fungal phyla. Results display a 16%-19% decrease in fungal diversity, assessed by beta diversity, across ponds in landscapes with more degraded permafrost. At the same time, sites with similar carbon quality shared more species, aligning a shift in species composition with the quality and availability of terrestrial dissolved organic matter. We demonstrate that the degradation of permafrost has a strong negative impact on aquatic fungal diversity, likely via interactions with the carbon pool released from ancient deposits. This is expected to have implications for carbon cycling and climate feedback loops in the rapidly warming Arctic.

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