Litcius/Paper detail

Exo‐ and endophytic fungi enable rapid transfer of nutrients from ant waste to orchid tissue

Christian Gegenbauer, Anke Bellaire, Arno Schintlmeister, Markus Schmid, Markus Kubicek, Hermann Voglmayr, Gerhard Zotz, Andreas Richter, Veronika Mayer

2023New Phytologist16 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Summary The epiphytic orchid Caularthron bilamellatum sacrifices its water storage tissue for nutrients from the waste of ants lodging inside its hollow pseudobulb. Here, we investigate whether fungi are involved in the rapid translocation of nutrients. Uptake was analysed with a 15 N labelling experiment, subsequent isotope ratio mass spectrometry (IRMS) and secondary ion mass spectrometry (ToF‐SIMS and NanoSIMS). We encountered two hyphae types: a thick melanized type assigned to ‘black fungi’ (Chaetothyriales, Cladosporiales, and Mycosphaerellales) in ant waste, and a thin endophytic type belonging to Hypocreales. In few cell layers, both hyphae types co‐occurred. 15 N accumulation in both hyphae types was conspicuous, while for translocation to the vessels only Hypocreales were involved. There is evidence that the occurrence of the two hyphae types results in a synergism in terms of nutrient uptake. Our study provides the first evidence that a pseudobulb (=stem)‐born endophytic network of Hypocreales is involved in the rapid translocation of nitrogen from insect‐derived waste to the vegetative and reproductive tissue of the host orchid. For C. bilamellatum that has no contact with the soil, ant waste in the hollow pseudobulbs serves as equivalent to soil in terms of nutrient sources.

Topics & Concepts

EpiphyteNutrientBiologyPlant use of endophytic fungi in defenseBotanyEcologyPlant and animal studiesPlant Parasitism and ResistanceMycorrhizal Fungi and Plant Interactions