4.7 Article

Sapwood mycobiome varies across host, plant compartment and environments in Nothofagus forests from Northern Patagonia

Journal

MOLECULAR ECOLOGY
Volume -, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/mec.16771

Keywords

environmental DNA; forest decline; latent pathogens; metabarcoding; temperate forests; wood endophyte

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This study characterized sapwood-inhabiting fungal communities in Nothofagus forests in southern South America using next-generation sequencing. The results showed that host species was the primary driver of fungal community structure and composition. Environmental factors such as site, season, and temperature also influenced the fungal community. These findings have important implications for understanding the fungal ecology in temperate forests of the southern hemisphere.
Global forests are increasingly being threatened by altered climatic conditions and increased attacks by pests and pathogens. The complex ecological interactions among pathogens, microbial communities, tree hosts and the environment are important drivers of forest dynamics. Little is known about the ecology of forest pathology and related microbial communities in temperate forests of the southern hemisphere. In this study, we used next-generation sequencing to characterize sapwood-inhabiting fungal communities in North Patagonian Nothofagus forests and assessed patterns of diversity of taxa and ecological guilds across climatic, site and host variables (health condition and compartment) as a contribution to Nothofagus autecology. The diversity patterns inferred through the metabarcoding analysis were similar to those obtained through culture-dependent approaches. However, we detected additional heterogeneity and greater richness with culture-free methods. Host species was the strongest driver of fungal community structure and composition, while host health status was the weakest. The relative impacts of site, season, plant compartment and health status were different for each tree species; these differences can be interpreted as a matter of water availability. For Nothofagus dombeyi, which is distributed across a wide range of climatic conditions, site was the strongest driver of community composition. The microbiome of N. pumilio varied more with season and temperature, a relevant factor for forest conservation in the present climate change scenario. Both species carry a number of potential fungal pathogens in their sapwood, whether they exhibit symptoms or not. Our results provide insight into the diversity of fungi associated with the complex pathobiome of the dominant Nothofagus species in southern South America.

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