Abstract

Dark septate endophytic (DSE) fungi represent a frequent root-colonizing fungal group common in environments with strong abiotic stress, such as (semi)arid ecosystems. This work aimed to study the DSE fungi colonizing the plants of semiarid sandy grasslands with wood steppe patches on the Great Hungarian Plain. As we may assume that fungi colonizing both invasive and native species are generalists, root associated fungi (RAF) were isolated from eight native and three invasive plant species. The nrDNA sequences of the isolates were used for identification. To confirm that the fungi were endophytes an artificial inoculation system was used to test the isolates: we considered a fungus as DSE if it colonized the roots without causing a negative effect on the plant and formed microsclerotia in the roots. According to the analyses of the ITS sequence of nrDNA the 296 isolates clustered into 41 groups. We found that 14 of these 41 groups were DSE, representing approximately 60% of the isolates. The main DSE groups were generalist and showed no specificity to area or season and colonized both native and invasive species, demonstrating that exotic plants are capable of using the root endophytic fungi of the invaded areas. The DSE community of the region shows high similarity to those found in arid grasslands of North America. Taking into account a previous hypothesis about the common root colonizers of those grasslands and our results reported here, we hypothesize that plants of (semi)arid grasslands share common dominant members of the DSE fungal community on a global scale.

Highlights

  • Endophytes, which consist of living organisms that colonize plant tissues during some period of their life cycle yet cause no symptoms of tissue damage to their hosts [1,2], are found in all biomes

  • We considered an isolate to be a Dark septate endophytes (DSE) fungus if it colonized the root with no visible negative effect to the plant and formed microsclerotia in the roots

  • Concluded that ‘grasses of the arid regions of North America share a general community of root associated fungi (RAF)’

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Summary

Introduction

Endophytes, which consist of living organisms that colonize plant tissues during some period of their life cycle yet cause no symptoms of tissue damage to their hosts [1,2], are found in all biomes. Among these endophytes, fungi commonly play important roles in ecosystem functioning [3]. There has been a continual increase in interest in DSE fungi (e.g., [7,8,9,10,11]), our knowledge of DSE fungi diversity and their function in ecosystems is limited and not as well understood as that of the common root colonizer mycorrhizal fungi or the previously mentioned grass endophytes

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