AI Article Synopsis

  • The study investigated how interactions between plants and fungi vary between leaves and soils across a vast mountain range in eastern China, examining 494 fungal communities associated with 55 tree species.
  • The research found that plant phylogeny (evolutionary relationships) was a key factor influencing fungal community composition, with leaves showing stronger ties to plant species than soils.
  • It revealed that fungal networks in leaves are more specialized and robust but less complex compared to those in soils, indicating that shifts in tree communities due to climate change could differently impact fungal diversity in these environments.

Article Abstract

Plant and fungal species interactions drive many essential ecosystem properties and processes; however, how these interactions differ between aboveground and belowground habitats remains unclear at large spatial scales. Here, we surveyed 494 pairwise fungal communities in leaves and soils by Illumina sequencing, which were associated with 55 woody plant species across more than 2,000-km span of mountain forests in eastern China. The relative contributions of plant, climate, soil and space to the variation of fungal communities were assessed, and the plant-fungus network topologies were inferred. Plant phylogeny was the strongest predictor for fungal community composition in leaves, accounting for 19.1% of the variation. In soils, plant phylogeny, climatic factors and soil properties explained 9.2%, 9.0% and 8.7% of the variation in soil fungal community, respectively. The plant-fungus networks in leaves exhibited significantly higher specialization, modularity and robustness (resistance to node loss), but less complicated topology (e.g., significantly lower linkage density and mean number of links) than those in soils. In addition, host/fungus preference combinations and key species, such as hubs and connectors, in bipartite networks differed strikingly between aboveground and belowground samples. The findings provide novel insights into cross-kingdom (plant-fungus) species co-occurrence at large spatial scales. The data further suggest that community shifts of trees due to climate change or human activities will impair aboveground and belowground forest fungal diversity in different ways.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s11427-022-2174-3DOI Listing

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