Evaluation of Natural Environment Laboratory, Graduate School of Frontier Sciences, The University of Tokyo, Chiba, Japan.
Akita Forestry Research and Training Center, Akita, Japan.
Mol Ecol. 2024 Oct;33(19):e17533. doi: 10.1111/mec.17533. Epub 2024 Sep 12.
Habitat fragmentation reduces gene flow, causing genetic differentiation and diversity loss in endangered species through genetic drift and inbreeding. However, the impact of habitat fragmentation on ectomycorrhizal (ECM) fungi remains unexplored, despite their critical roles in forest ecosystems. Here, we investigated the population genetic structure and the demographic history of Rhizopogon togasawarius, the ECM fungus specifically colonizing the host tree Pseudotsuga japonica, across its entire distribution range (>200 km). These two species are designated as endangered species on the IUCN Red List since they are found only in small, fragmented forests in Japan. We analysed 236 R. togasawarius individuals from five remaining populations across the Kii Peninsula and the Shikoku Island, separated by a sea channel. Simple sequence repeat analyses using 20 loci revealed strong genetic differentiation among populations (F = 0.255), even significant in the nearest population pair separated by a distance of only 8 km (F = 0.075), indicating extremely limited gene flow between populations. DIYABC-RF analyses implied that population divergence occurred approximately 6000 generations ago between the two regions, and nearly 1500 generations ago between the nearest populations within Shikoku Island, related to past climate events. Because of prolonged genetic isolation, significant inbreeding was confirmed in four of five populations, where effective population sizes became very small (N = 9.0-58.0). Although evaluation of extinction risks for microorganisms is challenging, our conservation genetic results indicated that habitat fragmentation increases extinction risk through population genetic mechanisms, and therefore should not be overlooked in biodiversity conservation efforts.
生境破碎化会减少基因流,导致濒危物种的遗传分化和多样性丧失,这是通过遗传漂变和近亲繁殖造成的。然而,尽管外生菌根真菌(ectomycorrhizal fungi,ECM)在森林生态系统中起着至关重要的作用,但它们对生境破碎化的影响仍未得到探索。在这里,我们研究了 ECM 真菌 Rhizopogon togasawarius 的种群遗传结构和历史动态,该真菌专门定植于宿主树日本铁杉(Pseudotsuga japonica),其分布范围超过 200 公里。这两个物种都被 IUCN 红色名录指定为濒危物种,因为它们仅在日本的小而破碎的森林中发现。我们分析了来自纪伊半岛和四国岛五个剩余种群的 236 个 R. togasawarius 个体,这些种群被海峡隔开。使用 20 个位点的简单序列重复分析显示,种群之间存在强烈的遗传分化(F=0.255),即使在最近的两个种群之间,距离仅 8 公里,遗传分化也很显著(F=0.075),这表明种群之间的基因流非常有限。DIYABC-RF 分析表明,大约在 6000 代前,两个地区的种群发生了分歧,而在四国岛最近的种群之间,大约在 1500 代前就发生了分歧,这与过去的气候事件有关。由于长期的遗传隔离,五个种群中的四个种群都存在显著的近亲繁殖,种群有效大小变得非常小(N=9.0-58.0)。虽然评估微生物的灭绝风险具有挑战性,但我们的保护遗传学结果表明,生境破碎化通过种群遗传机制增加了灭绝风险,因此在生物多样性保护工作中不应忽视这一问题。