Prevalent arbuscular mycorrhizae in roots and highly variable mycobiome in leaves of epiphytic subtropical fern Ophioderma pendulum

Author:

Xie Qiao‐Yi123,Kuo Li‐Yaung4,Chang Chiung‐Chih12,Lin Chien‐Jung5,Wang Wen‐Hong1ORCID,Chen Ko‐Hsuan1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Biodiversity Research Center Academia Sinica Taipei Taiwan

2. School of Life Science National Taiwan Normal University Taipei Taiwan

3. Institute of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology National Taiwan University Taiwan

4. Institute of Molecular and Cellular Biology National Tsing‐Hua University Hsinchu Taiwan

5. Fushan Research Center Taiwan Forestry Research Institute Yilan Taiwan

Abstract

AbstractPremiseEndophytic and mycorrhizal fungi are crucial in facilitating plant nutrition acquisition and stress tolerance. In epiphytic habitats, plants face nutrition and water stress, but their roots are mostly nonmycorrhizal and especially lacking in arbuscular mycorrhizal associations. Ophioderma pendulum is an epiphytic fern with a partially mycoheterotrophic lifestyle, likely heavily reliant on symbiotic fungi. To characterize fungal associations in the sporophyte of O. pendulum, we focused on leaves and roots of O. pendulum, seeking to reveal the fungal communities in these organs.MethodsRoots and leaves from O. pendulum in a subtropical forest were examined microscopically to observe the morphology of fungal structures and determine the percentage of various fungal structures in host tissues. Fungal composition was profiled using metabarcoding techniques that targeted ITS2 of the nuclear ribosomal DNA.ResultsRoots were consistently colonized by arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi (Glomeromycota), especially Acaulospora. Unlike previous findings on epiphytic ferns, dark septate endophytes were rare in O. pendulum roots. Leaves were predominantly colonized by Ascomycota fungi, specifically the classes Dothideomycetes (46.88%), Eurotiomycetes (11.51%), Sordariomycetes (6.23%), and Leotiomycetes (6.14%). Across sampling sites, fungal community compositions were similar in the roots but differed significantly in the leaves.ConclusionsOphioderma pendulum maintains stable, single‐taxon‐dominant communities in the roots, primarily featuring arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi, whereas the leaves may harbor opportunistic fungal colonizers. Our study underlines the significance of mycorrhizal fungi in the adaptation of epiphytic ferns.

Publisher

Wiley

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