Department of Soils and Natural Resources, Santa Catarina State University, Lages, SC, 88520-000, Brazil.
Centre for Functional Ecology, Department of Life Sciences, University of Coimbra, Calçada Martim de Freitas, Coimbra, 3000-456, Portugal.
Microb Ecol. 2021 Nov;82(4):942-960. doi: 10.1007/s00248-021-01721-y. Epub 2021 Mar 3.
Information concerning arbuscular mycorrhizal (AM) fungal geographical distribution in tropical and subtropical soils from the Atlantic Forest (a global hotspot of biodiversity) are scarce and often restricted to the evaluation of richness and abundance of AM fungal species at specific ecosystems or local landscapes. In this study, we hypothesized that AM fungal diversity and community composition in subtropical soils would display fundamental differences in their geographical patterns, shaped by spatial distance and land-use change, at local and regional scales. AM fungal community composition was examined by spore-based taxonomic analysis, using soil trap cultures. Acaulospora koskei and Glomus were found as generalists, regardless of mesoregions and land uses. Other Acaulospora species were also found generalists within mesoregions. Land-use change and intensification did not influence AM fungal composition, partially rejecting our first hypothesis. We then calculated the distance-decay of similarities among pairs of AM fungal communities and the distance-decay relationship within and over mesoregions. We also performed the Mantel test and redundancy analysis to discriminate the main environmental drivers of AM fungal diversity and composition turnover. Overall, we found significant distance-decays for all land uses. We also observed a distance-decay relationship within the mesoregion scale (< 104 km) and these changes were correlated mainly to soil type (not land use), with the secondary influence of both total organic carbon and clay contents. AM fungal species distribution presented significant distance-decays, regardless of land uses, which was indicative of dispersal limitation, a stochastic neutral process. Although, we found evidence that, coupled with dispersal limitation, niche differentiation also played a role in structuring AM fungal communities, driven by long-term historical contingencies, as represented by soil type, resulting from different soil origin and mineralogy across mesoregions.
有关大西洋森林(生物多样性的全球热点地区)热带和亚热带土壤中丛枝菌根(AM)真菌地理分布的信息很少,并且通常仅限于评估特定生态系统或局部景观中 AM 真菌物种的丰富度和丰度。在这项研究中,我们假设亚热带土壤中 AM 真菌多样性和群落组成在局部和区域尺度上,受空间距离和土地利用变化的影响,在地理模式上会显示出基本差异。使用土壤陷阱培养物,通过基于孢子的分类学分析来检查 AM 真菌群落组成。Acaulospora koskei 和 Glomus 被发现是无论在中地区域和土地利用方式如何都是普遍存在的。其他 Acaulospora 物种也在中地区域内被发现是普遍存在的。土地利用变化和集约化并没有影响 AM 真菌的组成,部分否定了我们的第一个假设。然后,我们计算了 AM 真菌群落之间成对相似性的距离衰减以及中地区域内和之间的距离衰减关系。我们还进行了 Mantel 检验和冗余分析,以区分 AM 真菌多样性和组成周转率的主要环境驱动因素。总体而言,我们发现所有土地利用方式都存在显著的距离衰减。我们还观察到中地区域尺度内的距离衰减关系(<104km),这些变化主要与土壤类型(而非土地利用)相关,其次是总有机碳和粘粒含量的影响。AM 真菌物种分布无论土地利用方式如何,都存在显著的距离衰减,这表明扩散限制是一个随机中性过程。尽管我们发现有证据表明,除了扩散限制之外,生态位分化也在 AM 真菌群落的结构中发挥了作用,这是由长期历史偶然事件驱动的,这些偶然事件代表了中地区域之间不同的土壤起源和矿物学的土壤类型。