Barbour Robert Charles, Storer Michelle J, Potts Bradley M
School of Plant Science and Cooperative Research Centre for Forestry, University of Tasmania, Private Bag 55, Hobart, Tasmania 7001, Australia.
Oecologia. 2009 May;160(2):335-42. doi: 10.1007/s00442-009-1295-z. Epub 2009 Feb 17.
Understanding the contribution of genetic variation within foundation species to community-level pattern and diversity represents the cornerstone of the developing field of community genetics. We assessed the relative importance of intraspecific genetic variation, spatial variation within a forest and microhabitat variation on a macrofungal decay community developing on logs of the Australian forest tree, Eucalyptus globulus. Uniform logs were harvested from trees from eight geographic races of E. globulus growing in a 15-year-old genetic trial. Logs were placed as designed grids within a native E. globulus forest and after 3 years of natural colonisation the presence of 62 macrofungal taxa were recorded from eight microhabitats on each log. The key factor found to drive macrofungal distribution and biodiversity on structurally uniform coarse woody debris was log-microhabitat, explaining 42% of the total variation in richness. Differences between log-microhabitats appeared to be due to variation in aspect, substrate (bark vs wood) and area/time of exposure to colonisation. This findings demonstrates the importance of considering fine-scale (within substrate) variation in the conservation and management of macrofungal biodiversity, an area that has received little previous attention. While a number of recent studies have demonstrated that the genetics of foundation tree species can influence dependent communities, this was not found to be the case for the early log decay community associated with E. globulus. Despite genetic variation in wood and bark properties existing within this species, there was no significant effect of tree genetics on macrofungal community richness or composition. This finding highlights the variation that may exist among guilds of organisms in their response to genetic variation within foundation species, an important consideration in a promising new area of research.
了解基础物种内的遗传变异对群落水平格局和多样性的贡献是群落遗传学这一新兴领域的基石。我们评估了种内遗传变异、森林内的空间变异以及微生境变异对在澳大利亚森林树种蓝桉原木上发育的大型真菌腐朽群落的相对重要性。从一个有15年历史的遗传试验中生长的蓝桉八个地理种群的树木上采伐了均匀的原木。将原木按照设计好的网格放置在一片原生蓝桉森林中,经过3年的自然定殖后,记录了每根原木上八个微生境中62种大型真菌类群的存在情况。发现驱动结构均匀的粗木质残体上大型真菌分布和生物多样性的关键因素是原木微生境,它解释了丰富度总变异的42%。原木微生境之间的差异似乎是由于朝向、基质(树皮与木材)以及定殖暴露的面积/时间的变化。这一发现表明在大型真菌生物多样性的保护和管理中考虑精细尺度(基质内)变异的重要性,而这一领域此前很少受到关注。虽然最近的一些研究表明基础树种的遗传学可以影响依赖其生存的群落,但在与蓝桉相关的早期原木腐朽群落中并非如此。尽管该物种的木材和树皮特性存在遗传变异,但树木遗传学对大型真菌群落的丰富度或组成没有显著影响。这一发现凸显了生物类群在对基础物种内遗传变异的反应中可能存在的差异,这是一个有前景的新研究领域中的重要考虑因素。