4.6 Article

Host preference and network properties in biotrophic plant-fungal associations

Journal

NEW PHYTOLOGIST
Volume 217, Issue 3, Pages 1230-1239

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/nph.14895

Keywords

endophytes; host specificity; macroecology; modularity; mycorrhizal fungi; nestedness; network analysis; phylogenetic distance

Categories

Funding

  1. Estonian Science Foundation [PUT1317, PUT1399, IUT 20-28]
  2. European Regional Development Fund (Centre of Excellence EcolChange)
  3. ERA-NET Cofund BiodivERsA3 (Project SoilMan)
  4. Charles University [NPUi LO1417 MSMT]
  5. Czech Academy of Sciences [L200051402]
  6. CAS [153211KYSB20160029]

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Analytical methods can offer insights into the structure of biological networks, but mechanisms that determine the structure of these networks remain unclear. We conducted a synthesis based on 111 previously published datasets to assess a range of ecological and evolutionary mechanisms that may influence the plant-associated fungal interaction networks. We calculated the relative host effect on fungal community composition and compared nestedness and modularity among different mycorrhizal types and endophytic fungal guilds. We also assessed how plant-fungal network structure was related to host phylogeny, environmental and sampling properties. Orchid mycorrhizal fungal communities responded most strongly to host identity, but the effect of host was similar among all other fungal guilds. Community nestedness, which did not differ among fungal guilds, declined significantly with increasing mean annual precipitation on a global scale. Orchid and ericoid mycorrhizal fungal communities were more modular than ectomycorrhizal and root endophytic communities, with arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi in an intermediate position. Network properties among a broad suite of plant-associated fungi were largely comparable and generally unrelated to phylogenetic distance among hosts. Instead, network metrics were predominantly affected by sampling and matrix properties, indicating the importance of study design in properly inferring ecological patterns.

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