Back to the roots: Uncovering ectomycorrhizal communities across three major African vegetation types.

IF 5.2 1区 生物学 Q1 MYCOLOGY
Ima Fungus Pub Date : 2025-05-29 eCollection Date: 2025-01-01 DOI:10.3897/imafungus.16.147055
Lowie Tondeleir, Eske De Crop, Tatiana Semenova, Jorinde Nuytinck, André-Ledoux Njouonkou, Atsu Kudzo Guelly, Glen Dierickx, József Geml, Annemieke Verbeken
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Ectomycorrhizal fungi (EcM) are critical to the health and sustainability of many African ecosystems that include EcM-associated tree species. In Sub-Saharan Africa, three major EcM-dominated vegetation types can be distinguished: the Central African Guineo-Congolian rainforests, the West African Sudanian woodlands and the East African Zambezian Miombo woodlands. While the rainforests feature humid conditions with isolated patches of EcM trees amongst predominantly arbuscular mycorrhizal (AM) communities, the woodlands are characterised by drier soils and more vast continuous areas of EcM trees. We hypothesise that the isolation of EcM tree patches within the rainforest promotes a unique and potentially endemic EcM fungal community, while riparian forests found along rivers in woodland areas may serve as corridors, facilitating the spread of such rare taxa into woodland regions. In this study, we employ root tip metabarcoding combined with Species Hypothesis (SH) matching to characterise the EcM communities across these three vegetation types. Consistent with previous findings from fruit-body surveys and eDNA studies, our results show that Russulaceae is the most abundant EcM clade across all three regions. Other clades reveal greater discrepancy compared to their above-ground abundances, with notably high abundances of Inocybaceae, Thelephoraceae and Sebacinaceae, especially in woodlands. Conversely, Amanitaceae and Boletaceae appear under-represented. Both Boletaceae and Elaphomycetaceae are found to be more prevalent in rainforest and riparian zones, illustrating the unique EcM community of the Guineo-Congolian rainforest. Our findings highlight the corridor potential of riparian areas in facilitating the spread of these rainforest endemics. This suggests that local edaphic and climatic conditions can override broad spatial patterns, such as distance decay, in community structure of African EcM. Moreover, we suggest a stronger effect of EcM host specificity than previously suggested for African fungal communities. Lastly, we assess the level of species-level representation and accuracy of taxonomic annotation of SHs within African Lactifluus. We confirm it to be one of the most thoroughly described and collected fungal genera on the continent, with over 80% of identified SHs represented in our herbarium collections.

Back到根部:揭示非洲三种主要植被类型的外生菌根群落。
外生菌根真菌(EcM)对许多非洲生态系统的健康和可持续性至关重要,其中包括与EcM相关的树种。在撒哈拉以南非洲,可以区分出三种主要的ecm主导的植被类型:中非几内亚-刚果雨林、西非苏丹林地和东非赞比西米亚博林地。热带雨林的特点是潮湿的环境,在丛枝菌根(AM)群落中有孤立的EcM树斑块,而林地的特点是土壤干燥,EcM树的连续面积更大。我们假设,雨林中EcM树斑块的隔离促进了一个独特的、潜在的特有的EcM真菌群落,而林地中河流沿岸的河岸森林可能作为走廊,促进了这些罕见分类群向林地地区的传播。在本研究中,我们采用根尖元条形码结合物种假设(SH)匹配来表征这三种植被类型的EcM群落。与之前的子实体调查和eDNA研究结果一致,我们的研究结果表明,Russulaceae是所有三个地区最丰富的EcM分支。与地面上的丰度相比,其他分支显示出更大的差异,特别是在林地中,Inocybaceae, theelephoraceae和Sebacinaceae的丰度明显很高。相反,Amanitaceae和Boletaceae似乎没有被充分代表。Boletaceae和Elaphomycetaceae在热带雨林和河岸地带均较为普遍,说明了几内亚-刚果雨林独特的EcM群落。我们的研究结果强调了河岸地区在促进这些热带雨林特有物种传播方面的走廊潜力。这表明,在非洲EcM群落结构中,当地的土壤和气候条件可以超越广泛的空间格局,如距离衰减。此外,我们认为EcM宿主特异性比以前认为的对非洲真菌群落的影响更强。最后,我们评估了非洲乳猪属SHs的种级代表性水平和分类注释的准确性。我们确认它是非洲大陆上被描述和收集得最彻底的真菌属之一,在我们的植物标本室收藏中有超过80%的已确定的SHs。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Ima Fungus
Ima Fungus Agricultural and Biological Sciences-Agricultural and Biological Sciences (miscellaneous)
CiteScore
11.00
自引率
3.70%
发文量
18
审稿时长
20 weeks
期刊介绍: The flagship journal of the International Mycological Association. IMA Fungus is an international, peer-reviewed, open-access, full colour, fast-track journal. Papers on any aspect of mycology are considered, and published on-line with final pagination after proofs have been corrected; they are then effectively published under the International Code of Nomenclature for algae, fungi, and plants. The journal strongly supports good practice policies, and requires voucher specimens or cultures to be deposited in a public collection with an online database, DNA sequences in GenBank, alignments in TreeBASE, and validating information on new scientific names, including typifications, to be lodged in MycoBank. News, meeting reports, personalia, research news, correspondence, book news, and information on forthcoming international meetings are included in each issue
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