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Fungus-growing termites, like Odontotermes obesus, cultivate Termitomyces as their sole food source on fungus combs which are continuously maintained with foraged plant materials. This necessary augmentation also increases the threat of introducing non-specific fungi capable of displacing Termitomyces. The magnitude of this threat and how termites prevent the invasion of such fungi remain largely unknown. This study identifies these non-specific fungi by establishing the pan-mycobiota of O. obesus from the fungus comb and termite castes. Furthermore, to maximize the identification of such fungi, the mycobiota of the decaying stages of the unattended fungus comb were also assessed. The simultaneous assessment of the microbiota and the mycobiota of these stages identified possible interactions between the fungal and bacterial members of this community. Based on these findings, we propose possible interactions among the crop fungus Termitomyces, the weedy fungus Pseudoxylaria and some bacterial symbiotes. These possibilities were then tested with in vitro interaction assays which suggest that Termitomyces, Pseudoxylaria and certain potential bacterial symbiotes possess anti-fungal capabilities. We propose a multifactorial interaction model of these microbes, under the care of the termites, to explain how their interactions can maintain a predominantly Termitomyces monoculture.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11330501PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s42003-024-06708-2DOI Listing

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