Hierarchical metacommunity structure of fungal endophytes

Author:

Pan Yuanfei1ORCID,Liu Mu1ORCID,Sosa Alejandro23ORCID,Li Bo14ORCID,Shi Mang5ORCID,Pan Xiaoyun1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Ministry of Education Key Laboratory of Biodiversity Science and Ecological Engineering, National Observations and Research Station for Wetland Ecosystems of the Yangtze Estuary, Institute of Biodiversity Science and Institute of Eco‐Chongming, School of Life Sciences Fudan University Shanghai 200438 China

2. Fundación para el Estudio de Especies Invasivas (FuEDEI) Hurlingham Buenos Aires 999071 Argentina

3. Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Científicas y Técnicas (CONICET), Ciudad Autónoma de Buenos Aires Buenos Aires 999071 Argentina

4. Ministry of Education Key Laboratory for Transboundary Ecosecurity of Southwest China and Yunnan Key Laboratory of Plant Reproductive Adaptation and Evolutionary Ecology and Centre for Invasion Biology, Institute of Biodiversity, School of Ecology and Environmental Science Yunnan University Kunming Yunnan 650032 China

5. State Key Laboratory for Biocontrol, School of Medicine Shenzhen Campus of Sun Yat‐sen University, Sun Yat‐sen University Shenzhen 518107 China

Abstract

Summary The ecological and evolutionary processes shaping community structure and functions of microbial symbionts are known to be scale‐dependent. Nonetheless, understanding how the relative importance of these processes changes across spatial scales, and deciphering the hierarchical metacommunity structure of fungal endophytes has proven challenging. We investigated metacommunities of endophytic fungi within leaves of an invasive plant (Alternanthera philoxeroides) across wide latitudinal transects both in its native (Argentina) and introduced (China) ranges to test whether metacommunities of fungal endophytes were structured by different drivers at different spatial scales. We found Clementsian structures with seven discrete compartments (distinctive groups of fungal species with coincident distribution ranges), which coincided with the distribution of major watersheds. Metacommunity compartments were explicitly demarcated at three spatial scales, that is, the between‐continent, between‐compartment, and within‐compartment scales. At larger spatial scales, local environmental conditions (climate, soil, and host plant traits) were replaced by other geographical factors as principal determinants of metacommunity structure of fungal endophytes and community diversity–function relationships. Our results reveal novel insights into the scale dependency of diversity and functions of fungal endophytes, which are likely similar for plant symbionts. These findings can potentially improve our understanding of the global patterns of fungal diversity.

Funder

National Basic Research Program of China

National Natural Science Foundation of China

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Plant Science,Physiology

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