Higher host plant specialization of root-associated endophytes than mycorrhizal fungi along an arctic elevational gradient

How community-level specialization differs among groups of organisms, and changes along environmental gradients, is fundamental to understanding the mechanisms influencing ecological communities. In this paper, we investigate the specialization of root-associated fungi for plant species, asking whet...

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Main Authors: Abrego, Nerea, Huotari, Tea, Tack, Ayco J. M., Lindahl, Björn, Tikhonov, Gleb, Somervuo, Panu, Schmidt, Niels Martin, Ovaskainen, Otso, Roslin, Tomas
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: 2020
Subjects:
Online Access:https://pub.epsilon.slu.se/18004/
https://pub.epsilon.slu.se/18004/1/abrego_n_et_al_201028.pdf
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spelling ftslunivuppsala:oai:pub.epsilon.slu.se:18004 2023-05-15T14:26:49+02:00 Higher host plant specialization of root-associated endophytes than mycorrhizal fungi along an arctic elevational gradient Abrego, Nerea Huotari, Tea Tack, Ayco J. M. Lindahl, Björn Tikhonov, Gleb Somervuo, Panu Schmidt, Niels Martin Ovaskainen, Otso Roslin, Tomas 2020 application/pdf https://pub.epsilon.slu.se/18004/ https://pub.epsilon.slu.se/18004/1/abrego_n_et_al_201028.pdf en eng eng https://pub.epsilon.slu.se/18004/1/abrego_n_et_al_201028.pdf Abrego, Nerea and Huotari, Tea and Tack, Ayco J. M. and Lindahl, Björn and Tikhonov, Gleb and Somervuo, Panu and Schmidt, Niels Martin and Ovaskainen, Otso and Roslin, Tomas (2020). Higher host plant specialization of root-associated endophytes than mycorrhizal fungi along an arctic elevational gradient. Ecology and Evolution. 10 , 8989-9002 [Research article] Ecology Research article NonPeerReviewed info:eu-repo/semantics/article 2020 ftslunivuppsala 2022-01-09T19:15:32Z How community-level specialization differs among groups of organisms, and changes along environmental gradients, is fundamental to understanding the mechanisms influencing ecological communities. In this paper, we investigate the specialization of root-associated fungi for plant species, asking whether the level of specialization varies with elevation. For this, we applied DNA barcoding based on the ITS region to root samples of five plant species equivalently sampled along an elevational gradient at a high arctic site. To assess whether the level of specialization changed with elevation and whether the observed patterns varied between mycorrhizal and endophytic fungi, we applied a joint species distribution modeling approach. Our results show that host plant specialization is not environmentally constrained in arctic root-associated fungal communities, since there was no evidence for changing specialization with elevation, even if the composition of root-associated fungal communities changed substantially. However, the level of specialization for particular plant species differed among fungal groups, root-associated endophytic fungal communities being highly specialized on particular host species, and mycorrhizal fungi showing almost no signs of specialization. Our results suggest that plant identity affects associated mycorrhizal and endophytic fungi differently, highlighting the need of considering both endophytic and mycorrhizal fungi when studying specialization in root-associated fungal communities. Article in Journal/Newspaper Arctic Arctic Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences (SLU): Epsilon Open Archive Arctic
institution Open Polar
collection Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences (SLU): Epsilon Open Archive
op_collection_id ftslunivuppsala
language English
topic Ecology
spellingShingle Ecology
Abrego, Nerea
Huotari, Tea
Tack, Ayco J. M.
Lindahl, Björn
Tikhonov, Gleb
Somervuo, Panu
Schmidt, Niels Martin
Ovaskainen, Otso
Roslin, Tomas
Higher host plant specialization of root-associated endophytes than mycorrhizal fungi along an arctic elevational gradient
topic_facet Ecology
description How community-level specialization differs among groups of organisms, and changes along environmental gradients, is fundamental to understanding the mechanisms influencing ecological communities. In this paper, we investigate the specialization of root-associated fungi for plant species, asking whether the level of specialization varies with elevation. For this, we applied DNA barcoding based on the ITS region to root samples of five plant species equivalently sampled along an elevational gradient at a high arctic site. To assess whether the level of specialization changed with elevation and whether the observed patterns varied between mycorrhizal and endophytic fungi, we applied a joint species distribution modeling approach. Our results show that host plant specialization is not environmentally constrained in arctic root-associated fungal communities, since there was no evidence for changing specialization with elevation, even if the composition of root-associated fungal communities changed substantially. However, the level of specialization for particular plant species differed among fungal groups, root-associated endophytic fungal communities being highly specialized on particular host species, and mycorrhizal fungi showing almost no signs of specialization. Our results suggest that plant identity affects associated mycorrhizal and endophytic fungi differently, highlighting the need of considering both endophytic and mycorrhizal fungi when studying specialization in root-associated fungal communities.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Abrego, Nerea
Huotari, Tea
Tack, Ayco J. M.
Lindahl, Björn
Tikhonov, Gleb
Somervuo, Panu
Schmidt, Niels Martin
Ovaskainen, Otso
Roslin, Tomas
author_facet Abrego, Nerea
Huotari, Tea
Tack, Ayco J. M.
Lindahl, Björn
Tikhonov, Gleb
Somervuo, Panu
Schmidt, Niels Martin
Ovaskainen, Otso
Roslin, Tomas
author_sort Abrego, Nerea
title Higher host plant specialization of root-associated endophytes than mycorrhizal fungi along an arctic elevational gradient
title_short Higher host plant specialization of root-associated endophytes than mycorrhizal fungi along an arctic elevational gradient
title_full Higher host plant specialization of root-associated endophytes than mycorrhizal fungi along an arctic elevational gradient
title_fullStr Higher host plant specialization of root-associated endophytes than mycorrhizal fungi along an arctic elevational gradient
title_full_unstemmed Higher host plant specialization of root-associated endophytes than mycorrhizal fungi along an arctic elevational gradient
title_sort higher host plant specialization of root-associated endophytes than mycorrhizal fungi along an arctic elevational gradient
publishDate 2020
url https://pub.epsilon.slu.se/18004/
https://pub.epsilon.slu.se/18004/1/abrego_n_et_al_201028.pdf
geographic Arctic
geographic_facet Arctic
genre Arctic
Arctic
genre_facet Arctic
Arctic
op_relation https://pub.epsilon.slu.se/18004/1/abrego_n_et_al_201028.pdf
Abrego, Nerea and Huotari, Tea and Tack, Ayco J. M. and Lindahl, Björn and Tikhonov, Gleb and Somervuo, Panu and Schmidt, Niels Martin and Ovaskainen, Otso and Roslin, Tomas (2020). Higher host plant specialization of root-associated endophytes than mycorrhizal fungi along an arctic elevational gradient. Ecology and Evolution. 10 , 8989-9002 [Research article]
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