Huang Yu-Ling, Bowman Elizabeth A, Massimo Nicholas C, Garber Nicholas P, U'Ren Jana M, Sandberg Dustin C, Arnold A Elizabeth
a School of Plant Sciences , The University of Arizona , 1140 E. South Campus Drive, Tucson , Arizona 85721.
b National Museum of Natural Science , 1 Guancian Road, Taichung , Taiwan , Republic of China.
Mycologia. 2018 Jan-Feb;110(1):47-62. doi: 10.1080/00275514.2018.1442078.
Biodiversity collections contain a wealth of information encapsulated both in specimens and in their metadata, providing the foundation for diverse studies in fields such as ecology. Yet biodiversity repositories can present a challenge for ecological inferences because collections rarely are structured with ecological questions in mind: collections may be opportunistic in space or time, may focus on particular taxonomic groups, may reflect different collection strategies in different places or times, or may not be exhaustive in terms of retaining every specimen or having similar metadata for each record. In addition to its primary holdings, the Robert L. Gilbertson Mycological Herbarium at the University of Arizona holds a collection of living specimens of fungi isolated from the interior of healthy plants and lichens (i.e., endophytic and endolichenic fungi). Over the past decade, more than 7000 isolates from the southwestern United States were accessioned, including strains from diverse hosts in more than 50 localities across the biotically rich state of Arizona. This collection is distinctive in that metadata and barcode sequences are available for each specimen, many localities have been sampled with consistent methods, and all isolates obtained in surveys have been retained. Here, we use this herbarium collection to examine endophyte community structure in an ecological and evolutionary context. We then artificially restructure the collection to resemble collections more typical of biodiversity repositories, providing a case study for ecological insights that can be gleaned from collections that were not structured explicitly to address ecological questions. Overall, our analyses highlight the relevance of biogeography, climate, hosts, and geographic separation in endophyte community composition. This study showcases the importance of extensive metadata in collections and highlights the utility of biodiversity collections that can yield emergent insights from many surveys to answer ecological questions in mycology, ultimately providing information for understanding and conserving fungal biodiversity.
生物多样性馆藏包含了大量蕴含在标本及其元数据中的信息,为生态学等领域的各种研究奠定了基础。然而,生物多样性储存库可能会给生态推断带来挑战,因为馆藏在构建时很少考虑生态问题:馆藏在空间或时间上可能具有随机性,可能专注于特定的分类群,可能在不同地点或时间反映不同的采集策略,或者在保留每个标本或为每条记录提供相似元数据方面可能并不详尽。除了主要馆藏外,亚利桑那大学的罗伯特·L·吉尔伯tson真菌标本馆还收藏了从健康植物和地衣内部分离出的真菌活体标本(即内生真菌和地衣内生真菌)。在过去十年中,该馆收录了来自美国西南部的7000多个分离株,包括来自生物多样性丰富的亚利桑那州50多个地点不同宿主的菌株。这个馆藏的独特之处在于每个标本都有元数据和条形码序列,许多地点采用了一致的采样方法,并且保留了调查中获得的所有分离株。在这里,我们利用这个标本馆馆藏,在生态和进化背景下研究内生真菌群落结构。然后,我们对馆藏进行人工重组,使其更类似于生物多样性储存库中更典型的馆藏,提供了一个案例研究,以探讨可以从并非明确为解决生态问题而构建的馆藏中获得的生态见解。总体而言,我们的分析突出了生物地理学、气候、宿主和地理隔离在内生真菌群落组成中的相关性。这项研究展示了馆藏中广泛元数据的重要性,并强调了生物多样性馆藏的效用,这些馆藏可以从许多调查中产生新的见解,以回答真菌学中的生态问题,最终为理解和保护真菌生物多样性提供信息。