Mikryukov Vladimir S, Dulya Olesya V, Bergman Igor E, Lihodeevskiy Georgiy A, Loginova Anzhelika D, Tedersoo Leho
Institute of Plant and Animal Ecology, Ural Branch of the Russian Academy of Sciences, Yekaterinburg, Russia.
Department of Botany, Chair of Mycology, Institute of Ecology and Earth Sciences, Tartu, Estonia.
Front Microbiol. 2021 Oct 6;12:729244. doi: 10.3389/fmicb.2021.729244. eCollection 2021.
Coarse woody debris (CWD) provides food and shelter to a large proportion of forest biota and is considered vital for biodiversity during periods of harsh weather. However, its importance in long-term stressed ecosystems remains largely unknown. In this work, we explored the contribution of CWD to fungal diversity along the gradient of boreal forest degradation caused by 77 years of heavy industrial emissions. We analyzed the diversity and composition of fungi in 270 samples of well-decayed and logs, as well as forest litter both adjacent to and distant from the logs. Compared with forest litter, the wood had higher water content and possessed substantially lower concentrations of heavy metals, which suggests its potential favorability for biota in polluted areas. The pollution-induced loss of fungal diversity in forest litter reached 34% and was stronger in the microhabitats not influenced by CWD. Meanwhile, wood fungal communities lost less than 10% of their total richness and even increased in alpha diversity. These processes led to the diversity and compositional convergence of fungal communities from different microhabitats and substrates in polluted areas. Despite this, the importance of wood and CWD-influenced microhabitats for fungal diversity maintenance was low. Apart from wood-associated fungi, the taxa whose diversity increased in the wood of polluted areas were ectomycorrhizal fungi and eurytopic soil saprotrophs (Mucoromycota, Mortierellomycota, Eurotiomycetes, and Helotiales) that easily tolerate highly toxic litter. Within the majority of pollution-sensitive soil saprotrophic groups, only terricolous Tricholomataceae benefit from CWD as microrefugia. Upon considering the ecological variability within low-rank taxa, the importance of decayed logs as safe sites can be high for certain soil-inhabiting fungal groups in polluted areas.
粗木质残体(CWD)为很大一部分森林生物群落提供食物和庇护所,并且在恶劣天气期间被认为对生物多样性至关重要。然而,其在长期受胁迫生态系统中的重要性在很大程度上仍不为人知。在这项研究中,我们沿着因77年重工业排放导致的北方森林退化梯度,探究了粗木质残体对真菌多样性的贡献。我们分析了270个充分腐烂的原木和圆木样本以及原木附近和远处森林凋落物中的真菌多样性和组成。与森林凋落物相比,木材含水量更高,重金属浓度则低得多,但这表明其对污染地区生物群落具有潜在的适宜性。森林凋落物中由污染导致的真菌多样性损失达到34%,并且在不受粗木质残体影响的微生境中更为严重。与此同时,木材真菌群落总丰富度损失不到10%,甚至α多样性有所增加。这些过程导致了污染地区不同微生境和基质的真菌群落多样性和组成趋同。尽管如此,木材和受粗木质残体影响的微生境对真菌多样性维持的重要性较低。除了与木材相关的真菌外,在污染地区木材中多样性增加的类群是外生菌根真菌和广适性土壤腐生菌(毛霉亚门、被孢霉亚门、散囊菌纲和柔膜菌目),它们能够轻易耐受剧毒的凋落物。在大多数对污染敏感的土壤腐生菌类群中,只有地生口蘑科从粗木质残体作为微避难所中受益。考虑到低等级分类单元内的生态变异性,对于污染地区某些栖息于土壤的真菌类群而言,腐烂原木作为安全场所的重要性可能很高。