4.4 Article

Habitat matters: The role of spore bank fungi in early seedling establishment of Florida slash pines

Journal

FUNGAL ECOLOGY
Volume 62, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.funeco.2022.101210

Keywords

Ectomycorrhizae (ECM); Habitat restoration; High throughput sequencing (HTS); Pine rocklands; Pinus; Rhizopogon; Sandhills; Scrub

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This study investigated the communities of ectomycorrhizal fungi in three different habitats in Florida and their association with the spore bank fungi and two species of pines. The dominant species in all habitats were Rhizopogon, and the community composition of fungal communities was influenced by habitat type and location. However, there were no significant differences in ectomycorrhizal communities between the two pine species.
This study investigated broad patterns in communities of ectomycorrhizal fungi from three Florida habitats (sandhills, scrub, and pine rocklands) and the ability of spore bank fungi to associate with Pinus elliottii (slash pine) and Pinus densa (south Florida slash pine). Efforts to replant pines in the endangered pine rocklands are vital to the persistence of this habitat, yet little is known about the ectomycorrhizal fungi communities or how they may differ from those in other pine-dominated habitats in Florida. We used high-throughput amplicon sequencing (HTS) to assess baseline fungal communities and greenhouse bioassays to bait ectomycorrhizal fungi using seedlings. HTS soil data recovered 188 ectomycorrhizal species but only a few subsequently colonized the bioassay seedlings. We recovered 21 ectomycorrhizal species on pine seedlings including common spore bank fungi such as Cenococcum, Suillus, and Tuber, but Rhizopogon species were dominant across all sites and habitats. Habitat type and site were significant variables influencing the community composition of the total soil fungal community, soil ectomycorrhizal community, and the fungi found on seedling root tips. However, we found no significant differences between the ectomycorrhizal communities on seedling roots from the two Pinus species.

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