Species richness and distribution patterns of leaf-inhabiting endophytic fungi in a temperate forest canopy

被引:64
|
作者
Unterseher, Martin [1 ]
Reiher, Almut [2 ]
Finstermeier, Knut [3 ]
Otto, Peter [2 ]
Morawetz, Wilfried [2 ]
机构
[1] Univ Greifswald, Dept Bot & Plant Systemat, Inst Bot & Landscape Ecol, D-17487 Greifswald, Germany
[2] Univ Leipzig, Dept Systemat Bot, Bot Gardens & Herbarium, D-04103 Leipzig, Germany
[3] Max Planck Inst Evolutionary Anthropol, Jr Sci Grp Mol Ecol, D-04103 Leipzig, Germany
关键词
D O I
10.1007/s11557-007-0541-1
中图分类号
Q93 [微生物学];
学科分类号
071005 ; 100705 ;
摘要
In 2005, researchers at the Leipzig Canopy Crane Research Facility collected living leaves of four temperate tree species at heights of between 15 and 33 m above the ground. Following surface sterilisation of the leaves, leaf-fragments were cultured on malt extract agar which allowed the growth of endophytic fungi into the surrounding medium. Isolated cultures were identified by morphology and sequence analysis of the D1/D2 region of the large subunit rDNA. Phylogenetic analysis established the taxonomic positions of the fungi. A total of 49 different taxa were identified, representing 20 families and ten orders. With the exception of one basidiomycetous yeast, all taxa belonged to filamentous ascomycetes. Species richness was highest on Tilia cordata and lowest on Quercus robur. Species-accumulation curves showed that the sampling effort was not sufficient to cover the majority of the likely species at the investigation site. Most endophytes proved to be ubiquitous within the canopy of the investigation site, but habitat preferences in terms of different tree species, different light regimes and season (sampling times) were obvious for some abundant endophytes. Apiognomonia errabunda and Aspergillus niger occurred predominantly on Q. robur, Diplodina acerina on Acer pseudoplatanus, one species of Phoma significantly prefered shaded leaves from the lower canopy layer whereas Sordaria fimicola prefered sun-exposed leaves from the upper tree crowns. Seasonal patterns were observed, for example, for A. errabunda, which was abundant in young leaves in the spring and almost completely absent in aged autumn-leaves, thus suggesting the accumulation of antifungal secondary plant metabolites during the growing season.
引用
收藏
页码:201 / 212
页数:12
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [41] Fungi inhabiting seeds of selected forest tree species
    Krol, Ewa D.
    Machowicz-Stefaniak, Zofia
    Zimowska, Beata
    Abramczyk, Barbara A.
    Zalewska, Ewa D.
    SYLWAN, 2015, 159 (02): : 135 - 141
  • [42] AUSTRALIAN LEAF-INHABITING FUNGI .12. SEMIFISSISPORA GEN-NOV ON DEAD EUCALYPTUS LEAVES
    SWART, HJ
    TRANSACTIONS OF THE BRITISH MYCOLOGICAL SOCIETY, 1982, 78 (APR): : 259 - 264
  • [43] Laser remote sensing of canopy habitat heterogeneity as a predictor of bird species richness in an eastern temperate forest, USA
    Goetz, Scott
    Steinberg, Daniel
    Dubayah, Ralph
    Blair, Bryan
    REMOTE SENSING OF ENVIRONMENT, 2007, 108 (03) : 254 - 263
  • [44] Ungulate exclusion accentuates increases in woody species richness and abundance with canopy gap creation in a temperate hardwood forest
    Sabo, Autumn E.
    Forrester, Jodi A.
    Burton, Julia, I
    Jones, Phillip D.
    Mladenoff, David J.
    Kruger, Eric L.
    FOREST ECOLOGY AND MANAGEMENT, 2019, 433 : 386 - 395
  • [45] Dilution-to-extinction cultivation of leaf-inhabiting endophytic fungi in beech (Fagus sylvatica L.) - Different cultivation techniques influence fungal biodiversity assessment
    Unterseher, Martin
    Schnittler, Martin
    MYCOLOGICAL RESEARCH, 2009, 113 : 645 - 654
  • [46] Successional development of wood-inhabiting fungi associated with dominant tree species in a natural temperate floodplain forest
    Lepinay, Clementine
    Tlaskal, Vojtech
    Vrska, Tomas
    Brabcova, Vendula
    Baldrian, Petr
    FUNGAL ECOLOGY, 2022, 59
  • [47] INVITRO HYPHAL INTERACTIONS AMONG WOOD-INHABITING AND LEAF-INHABITING ASCOMYCETES AND FUNGI IMPERFECTI FROM FRESH-WATER HABITATS
    SHEARER, CA
    ZAREMAIVAN, H
    MYCOLOGIA, 1988, 80 (01) : 31 - 37
  • [48] LEAF-CUTTING ANTS (ATTA AND ACROMYRMEX) INHABITING ARGENTINA - PATTERNS IN SPECIES RICHNESS AND GEOGRAPHICAL RANGE SIZES
    GUSTAVO, A
    BRENER, F
    RUGGIERO, A
    JOURNAL OF BIOGEOGRAPHY, 1994, 21 (04) : 391 - 399
  • [49] Species richness patterns in symbiotic gut fungi (Trichomycetes)
    Cafaro, MJ
    FUNGAL DIVERSITY, 2002, 9 : 47 - 56
  • [50] How vertical patterns in leaf traits shift seasonally and the implications for modeling canopy photosynthesis in a temperate deciduous forest
    Coble, Adam P.
    VanderWall, Brittany
    Mau, Alida
    Cavaleri, Molly A.
    TREE PHYSIOLOGY, 2016, 36 (09) : 1077 - 1091