Department of Microbiology and Plant Pathology, University of California-Riverside, Riverside, CA 92521, USA.
Department of Microbiology and Plant Pathology, University of California-Riverside, Riverside, CA 92521, USA.
Curr Biol. 2021 Oct 11;31(19):R1312-R1325. doi: 10.1016/j.cub.2021.06.083.
Fungi have successfully established themselves across seemingly every possible niche, substrate, and biome. They are fundamental to biogeochemical cycling, interspecies interactions, food production, and drug bioprocessing, as well as playing less heroic roles as difficult to treat human infections and devastating plant pathogens. Despite community efforts to estimate and catalog fungal diversity, we have only named and described a minute fraction of the fungal world. The identification, characterization, and conservation of fungal diversity is paramount to preserving fungal bioresources, and to understanding and predicting ecosystem cycling and the evolution and epidemiology of fungal disease. Although species and ecosystem conservation are necessarily the foundation of preserving this diversity, there is value in expanding our definition of conservation to include the protection of biological collections, ecological metadata, genetic and genomic data, and the methods and code used for our analyses. These definitions of conservation are interdependent. For example, we need metadata on host specificity and biogeography to understand rarity and set priorities for conservation. To aid in these efforts, we need to draw expertise from diverse fields to tie traditional taxonomic knowledge to data obtained from modern -omics-based approaches, and support the advancement of diverse research perspectives. We also need new tools, including an updated framework for describing and tracking species known only from DNA, and the continued integration of functional predictions to link genetic diversity to functional and ecological diversity. Here, we review the state of fungal diversity research as shaped by recent technological advancements, and how changing viewpoints in taxonomy, -omics, and systematics can be integrated to advance mycological research and preserve fungal biodiversity.
真菌已成功地在看似每一个可能的生态位、基质和生物群落中建立了自己的地位。它们是生物地球化学循环、种间相互作用、食物生产和药物生物加工的基础,同时也扮演着不那么英雄的角色,如难以治疗的人类感染和破坏性的植物病原体。尽管社区努力估计和编目真菌多样性,但我们只命名和描述了真菌世界的一小部分。真菌多样性的鉴定、特征描述和保护对于保护真菌生物资源,以及了解和预测生态系统循环以及真菌疾病的进化和流行病学至关重要。尽管物种和生态系统保护是保护这种多样性的必要基础,但扩大我们对保护的定义,包括保护生物收藏、生态元数据、遗传和基因组数据以及我们分析中使用的方法和代码,也具有价值。这些保护定义是相互依存的。例如,我们需要有关宿主特异性和生物地理学的元数据来了解稀有性并为保护设定优先级。为了辅助这些努力,我们需要从不同领域汲取专业知识,将传统的分类学知识与从现代基于组学的方法获得的数据联系起来,并支持多样化研究视角的发展。我们还需要新的工具,包括一个更新的框架来描述和跟踪仅从 DNA 中已知的物种,以及继续整合功能预测,将遗传多样性与功能和生态多样性联系起来。在这里,我们回顾了真菌多样性研究的现状,以及分类学、组学和系统学的观点变化如何整合以推进真菌学研究和保护真菌生物多样性。