Department of Biological Sciences, University of Manitoba, Winnipeg, MB, Canada R3T 2N2.
Mol Ecol. 2011 Sep;20(18):3708-10. doi: 10.1111/j.1365-294X.2011.05191.x.
Domestication of algae by lichen-forming fungi describes the symbiotic relationship between the photosynthetic (green alga or cyanobacterium; photobiont) and fungal (mycobiont) partnership in lichen associations (Goward 1992). The algal domestication implies that the mycobiont cultivates the alga as a monoculture within its thallus, analogous to a farmer cultivating a food crop. However, the initial photobiont 'selection' by the mycobiont may be predetermined by the habitat rather than by the farmer. When the mycobiont selects a photobiont from the available photobionts within a habitat, the mycobiont may influence photobiont growth and reproduction (Ahmadjian & Jacobs 1981) only after the interaction has been initiated. The theory of ecological guilds (Rikkinen et al. 2002) proposes that habitat limits the variety of photobionts available to the fungal partner. While some studies provide evidence to support the theory of ecological guilds in cyanobacterial lichens (Rikkinen et al. 2002), other studies propose models to explain variation in symbiont combinations in green algal lichens (Ohmura et al. 2006; Piercey-Normore 2006; Yahr et al. 2006) hypothesizing the existence of such guilds. In this issue of Molecular Ecology, Peksa & Škaloud (2011) test the theory of ecological guilds and suggest a relationship between algal habitat requirements and lichen adaptation in green algal lichens of the genus Lepraria. The environmental parameters examined in this study, exposure to rainfall, altitude and substratum type, are integral to lichen biology. Lichens have a poikilohydric nature, relying on the availability of atmospheric moisture for metabolic processes. Having no known active mechanism to preserve metabolic thallus moisture in times of drought, one would expect a strong influence of the environment on symbiont adaptation to specific habitats. Adaptation to changes in substrata and its properties would be expected with the intimate contact between crustose lichens in the genus Lepraria. Altitude has been suggested to influence species distributions in a wide range of taxonomic groups. This is one of the first studies to illustrate an ecological guild, mainly for exposure to rainfall (ombrophiles and ombrophobes), with green algal lichens.
藻菌共生体中的藻种驯化描述了光合生物(绿藻或蓝藻;藻细胞)和真菌(菌细胞)在共生体中的共生关系(Goward 1992)。藻种驯化意味着菌细胞在其叶状体中培育藻细胞作为纯培养物,类似于农民种植粮食作物。然而,菌细胞对藻细胞的最初“选择”可能是由栖息地决定的,而不是由农民决定的。当菌细胞从栖息地中可用的藻细胞中选择藻细胞时,菌细胞可能会在相互作用开始后影响藻细胞的生长和繁殖(Ahmadjian & Jacobs 1981)。生态 guild 理论(Rikkinen 等人,2002)提出,栖息地限制了真菌伙伴可用的藻细胞的种类。虽然一些研究提供了证据支持蓝藻菌中的生态 guild 理论(Rikkinen 等人,2002),但其他研究提出了模型来解释绿藻菌中的共生体组合变化(Ohmura 等人,2006;Piercey-Normore 2006;Yahr 等人,2006),假设存在这样的 guild。在本期《分子生态学》中,Peksa & Škaloud(2011)检验了生态 guild 理论,并提出了绿藻菌属 Lepraria 中藻细胞栖息地要求与地衣适应之间的关系。本研究中检查的环境参数,包括降雨量、海拔和基质类型,都是地衣生物学的重要组成部分。地衣具有变水性质,依赖于大气水分的可用性来进行代谢过程。由于没有已知的主动机制来在干旱时期保存代谢组织水分,因此人们预计环境对地衣对特定栖息地的共生体适应会有很大的影响。与 Lepraria 属中的地衣密切接触,预计会对地衣适应基质及其性质的变化产生影响。海拔已被认为会影响广泛的分类群中的物种分布。这是第一个主要研究绿藻菌的生态 guild 的研究之一,主要是研究降雨量暴露(喜湿种和不喜湿种)的影响。