Abstract

Phyllosphere fungi harbor a tremendous species diversity and play important ecological roles. However, little is known about their distribution patterns within forest ecosystems. We examined how species diversity and community composition of phyllosphere fungi change along a vertical structure in a tropical forest in Thailand. Fungal communities in 144 leaf samples from 19 vertical layers (1.28–34.4 m above ground) of 73 plant individuals (27 species) were investigated by metabarcoding analysis using Ion Torrent sequencing. In total, 1,524 fungal operational taxonomic units (OTUs) were detected among 890,710 reads obtained from the 144 leaf samples. Taxonomically diverse fungi belonging to as many as 24 orders of Ascomycota and 21 orders of Basidiomycota were detected, most of which inhabited limited parts of the lowest layers closest to the forest floor. Species diversity of phyllosphere fungi was the highest in the lowest layers closest to the forest floor, decreased with increasing height, and lowest in the canopy; 742 and 55 fungal OTUs were detected at the lowest and highest layer, respectively. On the layers close to the forest floor, phyllosphere fungal communities were mainly composed of low frequency OTUs and largely differentiated among plant individuals. Conversely, in the canopy, fungal communities consisted of similar OTUs across plant individuals, and as many as 86.1%–92.7% of the OTUs found in the canopy (≥22 m above ground) were also distributed in the lower layers. Overall, our study showed the variability of phyllosphere fungal communities along the vertical gradient of plant vegetation and environmental conditions, suggesting the significance of biotic and abiotic variation for the species diversity of phyllosphere fungi.

Highlights

  • Phyllosphere fungi, which inhabit tissues of living plants, have been recognized to harbor tremendous species diversity and play significant ecological roles [1]

  • The resulting sequence clusters were used as operational taxonomic units (OTUs) in the analysis described below

  • Overall species diversity and taxonomic compositions of phyllosphere fungi In the tropical seasonal evergreen forest, taxonomically diverse phyllosphere fungi are associated with various plant species from the understory to the canopy

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Phyllosphere fungi, which inhabit tissues of living plants, have been recognized to harbor tremendous species diversity and play significant ecological roles [1]. Almost all major lineages of land plants distributed from polar regions to tropics are associated with taxonomically diverse phyllosphere fungi [1,2,3] and can be subject to some ecological effects by these fungi, such as PLOS ONE | DOI:10.1371/journal.pone.0166669. Almost all major lineages of land plants distributed from polar regions to tropics are associated with taxonomically diverse phyllosphere fungi [1,2,3] and can be subject to some ecological effects by these fungi, such as PLOS ONE | DOI:10.1371/journal.pone.0166669 November 18, 2016

Objectives
Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call