Local Adaptation to Soil Hypoxia Determines the Structure of an Arbuscular Mycorrhizal Fungal Community in Roots from Natural CO 2 Springs

Author:

Maček Irena1,Dumbrell Alex J.23,Nelson Michaela2,Fitter Alastair H.2,Vodnik Dominik1,Helgason Thorunn2

Affiliation:

1. Department of Agronomy, Biotechnical Faculty, University of Ljubljana, Jamnikarjeva 101, 1001 Ljubljana, Slovenia

2. Department of Biology, Wentworth Way, University of York, York YO10 5DD, United Kingdom

3. Department of Biological Sciences, University of Essex, Wivenhoe Park, Colchester CO4 3SQ, United Kingdom

Abstract

ABSTRACT The processes responsible for producing and maintaining the diversity of natural arbuscular mycorrhizal (AM) fungal communities remain largely unknown. We used natural CO 2 springs (mofettes), which create hypoxic soil environments, to determine whether a long-term, directional, abiotic selection pressure could change AM fungal community structure and drive the selection of particular AM fungal phylotypes. We explored whether those phylotypes that appear exclusively in hypoxic soils are local specialists or widespread generalists able to tolerate a range of soil conditions. AM fungal community composition was characterized by cloning, restriction fragment length polymorphism typing, and the sequencing of small subunit rRNA genes from roots of four plant species growing at high (hypoxic) and low (control) geological CO 2 exposure. We found significant levels of AM fungal community turnover (β diversity) between soil types and the numerical dominance of two AM fungal phylotypes in hypoxic soils. Our results strongly suggest that direct environmental selection acting on AM fungi is a major factor regulating AM fungal communities and their phylogeographic patterns. Consequently, some AM fungi are more strongly associated with local variations in the soil environment than with their host plant's distribution.

Publisher

American Society for Microbiology

Subject

Ecology,Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology,Food Science,Biotechnology

Reference51 articles.

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3. BadianiA. RaschiA. PaolacciA. R. MigliettaF. . 1999. Plant responses to elevated CO2: a prospective from natural CO2 springs. In AgrawalS. B. AgrawalM. . (ed.), Environmental pollution and plant responses. CRC Press LLC, Boca Raton, FL.

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