4.4 Article

Those Nematode-Trapping Fungi That are not Everywhere: Hints Towards Soil Microbial Biogeography

Journal

JOURNAL OF MICROBIOLOGY
Volume 61, Issue 5, Pages 511-523

Publisher

MICROBIOLOGICAL SOCIETY KOREA
DOI: 10.1007/s12275-023-00043-7

Keywords

Microorganisms; Yunnan; Fungi; Pure culture; Geographical distribution

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The existence of biogeography for microorganisms is a hot topic in ecology, and researchers are using better distinction methods to reveal potential hidden patterns. In this study, a group of soil nematode-trapping fungi were analyzed to gain insight into the geographic distribution of microorganisms. The results showed a cosmopolitan tendency for this group, with only a few widespread species and non-random heterogeneous distributions for the others. The study highlights the need for further research on factors influencing microbial distribution.
The existence of biogeography for microorganisms is a raising topic in ecology and researchers are employing better distinctions between single species, including the most rare ones, to reveal potential hidden patterns. An important volume of evidence supporting heterogeneous distributions for bacteria, archaea and protists is accumulating, and more recently a few efforts have targeted microscopic fungi. We propose an insight into this latter kingdom by looking at a group of soil nematode-trapping fungi whose species are well-known and easily recognizable. We chose a pure culture approach because of its reliable isolation procedures for this specific group. After morphologically and molecularly identifying all species collected from 2250 samples distributed in 228 locations across Yunnan province of China, we analyzed occurrence frequencies and mapped species, genera, and richness. Results showed an apparent cosmopolitan tendency for this group of fungi, including species richness among sites. However, only four species were widespread across the region, while non-random heterogeneous distributions were observed for the remaining 40 species, both in terms of statistical distribution of species richness reflected by a significant variance-to-mean ratio, as well as in terms of visually discernible spatial clusters of rare species and genera on the map. Moreover, several species were restricted to only one location, raising the question of whether endemicity exists for this microbial group. Finally, environmental heterogeneity showed a marginal contribution in explaining restricted distributions, suggesting that other factors such as geographical isolation and dispersal capabilities should be explored. These findings contribute to our understanding of the cryptic geographic distribution of microorganisms and encourage further research in this direction.

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