AI Article Synopsis

  • Fungal endophytes significantly enhance the health and productivity of both native and cultivated plants, but research on their communities in eucalypt species remains limited.
  • This study focused on the seasonal and spatial dynamics of fungal leaf endophytes in Eucalyptus crebra, finding that summer had significantly higher fungal diversity compared to autumn and spring.
  • The results revealed different fungal compositions across seasons and canopy levels, with Ascomycota being the most prevalent phylum year-round, and highlighted the importance of monitoring endophytic fungi for the health of E. crebra and similar species.

Article Abstract

Fungal endophytes play an important role in improving the health and productivity of native and cultivated plant species. Despite their ecological and industrial importance, few eucalypt species have been studied in terms of their endophyte communities. We examined the seasonal and spatial dynamics of fungal leaf endophytes in the model species, Eucalyptus crebra (narrow-leaved ironbark), using ITS-based amplicon sequencing. Alpha and beta diversity analyses revealed significantly higher species richness in summer compared to autumn and spring. Similarly, two-way ANOVA analysis showed significantly higher species diversity in summer compared to autumn (observed p < 0.001, Chao1 p < 0.005) and spring (observed p < 0.005, Chao1 p < 0.005). No difference in Shannon index was observed among different canopy levels across the season. Beta-diversity showed differences in fungal composition across the seasons and at various canopy levels based on unweighted UniFrac distance metric (PERMANOVA season p < 0.001, canopy p < 0.05), signifying distinct separation of fungi based on presence-absence. Ascomycota was the most abundant and diverse phylum and was present throughout the year. In contrast, Basidiomycota was only observed during cooler and drier seasons. Neofusicoccum was the most abundant genus, but distribution fluctuated significantly across the seasons. Pestalotiopsis and Neopestalotiopsis were most abundant in the low leaf canopy, whereas Pseudosydowia was most abundant in the high canopy. This study indicates that the diversity and abundance of endophytic fungi in the leaves of healthy E. crebra trees fluctuate seasonally and across canopy levels. The data generated can be used as a baseline for assessing and potentially modulating the health of E. crebra and other important Eucalyptus spp.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11573855PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00248-024-02455-3DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

seasonal spatial
8
spatial dynamics
8
dynamics fungal
8
fungal leaf
8
leaf endophytes
8
eucalyptus crebra
8
crebra narrow-leaved
8
narrow-leaved ironbark
8
higher species
8
summer compared
8

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!