Litcius/Paper detail

Compartment and Plant Identity Shape Tree Mycobiome in a Subtropical Forest

Hao Yang, Zhijie Yang, Quancheng Wang, Yonglong Wang, Hang‐Wei Hu, Ji‐Zheng He, Yong Zheng, Yusheng Yang

2022Microbiology Spectrum30 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Subtropical mountain forests are widely distributed in Southern China and are characterized by high biodiversity. The interactions between plants and fungi play pivotal roles in biodiversity maintenance and community stability. Nevertheless, knowledge of fungal diversity and of the community assembly patterns of woody plants is scarce. Here, we investigated fungal diversity and community assembly in the phyllosphere and rhizosphere of 13 tree species in a common-garden experiment. We found that both compartment and plant identity influenced fungal diversity, community, and guild compositions, while deterministic processes mainly governed the fungal community assembly, especially in the rhizospheric fungal communities. Our results demonstrate that tree leaves represent stronger host/fungi preferences than do roots and soils. Together, our findings enhance the understanding of the roles of compartment and plant identity in structuring fungal communities as well as promote fungal diversity maintenance in subtropical mountain forest ecosystems.

Topics & Concepts

Compartment (ship)SubtropicsTree (set theory)Identity (music)BiologyGeographyEcologyMathematicsGeologyCombinatoricsArtOceanographyAestheticsMycorrhizal Fungi and Plant InteractionsPlant Parasitism and ResistancePlant and animal studies