4.5 Article

Global taxonomic and phylogenetic assembly of AM fungi

Journal

MYCORRHIZA
Volume 32, Issue 2, Pages 135-144

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00572-022-01072-7

Keywords

Community assembly; Metabarcoding; Microbial biogeography; Soil microbes

Funding

  1. European Regional Development Fund (Centre of Excellence EcolChange)
  2. Estonian Research Council [PRG609, PRG632, PRG1065, PRG1170, MOBTP105]
  3. Russian Ministry of Science and Higher Education [075-15-20211396]
  4. University of Tartu [PLTOM20903]

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This study analyzed AM fungal sequence data from global soil samples and found that the composition of AM fungal communities is primarily influenced by habitat conditions and is related to climate and soil gradients. The study also found that the evolutionary structure of AM fungal communities is affected by the same factors, but with weaker correlations.
Arbuscular mycorrhizal (AM) fungi are a ubiquitous group of plant symbionts, yet processes underlying their global assembly - in particular the roles of dispersal limitation and historical drivers - remain poorly understood. Because earlier studies have reported niche conservatism in AM fungi, we hypothesized that variation in taxonomic community composition (i.e., unweighted by taxon relatedness) should resemble variation in phylogenetic community composition (i.e., weighted by taxon relatedness) which reflects ancestral adaptations to historical habitat gradients. Because of the presumed strong dispersal ability of AM fungi, we also anticipated that the large-scale structure of AM fungal communities would track environmental conditions without regional discontinuity. We used recently published AM fungal sequence data (small-subunit ribosomal RNA gene) from soil samples collected worldwide to reconstruct global patterns in taxonomic and phylogenetic community variation. The taxonomic structure of AM fungal communities was primarily driven by habitat conditions, with limited regional differentiation, and there were two well-supported clusters of communities - occurring in cold and warm conditions. Phylogenetic structure was driven by the same factors, though all relationships were markedly weaker. This suggests that niche conservatism with respect to habitat associations is weakly expressed in AM fungal communities. We conclude that the composition of AM fungal communities tracks major climatic and edaphic gradients, with the effects of dispersal limitation and historic factors considerably less apparent than those of climate and soil.

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