4.4 Article

Wood-inhabiting insects can function as targeted vectors for decomposer fungi

Journal

FUNGAL ECOLOGY
Volume 29, Issue -, Pages 76-84

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.funeco.2017.06.006

Keywords

Animal-mediated dispersal; Dead wood; Decomposition; DNA barcoding; High-throughput sequencing; Insect-vectored dispersal; Polypores; Saproxylic insects; Scanning electron microscopy; Wood-decay fungi

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Most wood-inhabiting fungi are assumed to be dispersed primarily by wind, with the exception of a few species involved in mutualistic relationships with insects. In this study we tested whether several species of wood-inhabiting insects can function as dispersal vectors for non-mutualistic fungi, which would indicate that wood-inhabiting fungi can benefit from targeted animal-mediated dispersal. We sampled wood-inhabiting beetles (Coleoptera) from freshly felled wood experimentally added to forests and used DNA metabarcoding to investigate the fungal DNA carried by these insects. Staphylinid beetles rarely contained fungal DNA, while Endomychus coccineus, Glischrochilus hortensis and Glischrochilus quadripunctatus frequently carried fungal DNA with a composition specific to the insect taxon. A large proportion of the obtained fungal sequences (34%) represented decomposer fungi, including well-known wood-decay fungi such as Fomitopsis pinicola, Fames fomentarius, Trichaptum abietinum and Trametes versicolor. Scanning electron microscopy further showed that some of the fungal material was carried as spores or yeast cells on the insect exoskeletons. Our results suggest that insect vectored dispersal is of broader importance to wood-inhabiting fungi than previously assumed. (C) 2017 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Ltd.

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