Litcius/Paper detail

Fungal genome size and composition reflect ecological strategies along soil fertility gradients

Haiyang Zhang, Andrew Bissett, Carlos A. Aguilar‐Trigueros, Hongwei Liu, Jeff R. Powell

2023Ecology Letters26 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Genomic traits reflect the evolutionary processes that have led to ecological variation among extant organisms, including variation in how they acquire and use resources. Soil fungi have diverse nutritional strategies and exhibit extensive variation in fitness along resource gradients. We tested for trade-offs in genomic traits with mycelial nutritional traits and hypothesize that such trade-offs differ among fungal guilds as they reflect contrasting resource exploitation and habitat preferences. We found species with large genomes exhibited nutrient-poor mycelium and low GC content. These patterns were observed across fungal guilds but with varying explanatory power. We then matched trait data to fungal species observed in 463 Australian grassland, woodland and forest soil samples. Fungi with large genomes and lower GC content dominated in nutrient-poor soils, associated with shifts in guild composition and with species turnover within guilds. These findings highlight fundamental mechanisms that underpin successful ecological strategies for soil fungi.

Topics & Concepts

EcologyBiologyFertilityComposition (language)GeographyPopulationLinguisticsSociologyPhilosophyDemographyMycorrhizal Fungi and Plant InteractionsPlant Pathogens and Fungal DiseasesPlant and fungal interactions