Abstract

Summary The identification of traits that influence the responses of the species to environmental variation provides a mechanistic perspective on the assembly processes of ecological communities. While much research linking functional ecology with assembly processes has been conducted with animals and plants, the development of predictive or even conceptual frameworks for fungal functional community ecology remains poorly explored. Particularly, little is known about the contribution of traits to the occurrences of fungal species under different environmental conditions. Wood‐inhabiting fungi are known to strongly respond to habitat disturbance, and thus provide an interesting case study for investigating to what extent variation in occurrence patterns of fungi can be related to traits. We apply a trait‐based joint species distribution model to a data set consisting of fruit‐body occurrence data on 321 wood‐inhabiting fungal species collected in 22 460 dead wood units from managed and natural forest sites. Our results show that environmental filtering plays a big role on shaping wood‐inhabiting fungal communities, as different environments held different communities in terms of species and trait compositions. Most importantly, forest management selected against species with large and long‐lived fruit‐bodies as well as late decayers, and promoted the occurrences of species with small fruit‐bodies and early decayers. A strong phylogenetic signal in the data suggested the existence of also some other functionally important traits than the ones we considered. We found that those species groups that were more prevalent in natural conditions had more associations to other species than species groups that were tolerant to or benefitted from forest management. Therefore, the changes that forest management causes on wood‐inhabiting fungal communities influence ecosystem functioning through simplification of interactive associations among the fungal species. Synthesis. Our results show that functional traits are linked to the responses of wood‐inhabiting fungi to variation in their environment, and thus environmental changes alter ecosystem functions via promoting or reducing species with different fruit‐body types. However, further research is needed to identify other functional traits and to provide conclusive evidence for the adaptive nature of the links from traits to occurrence patterns found here.

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