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1.
Am J Bot ; 110(1): e16099, 2023 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36371729

ABSTRACT

PREMISE: Arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi (AMF) can strongly influence host plant vegetative growth, but less is known about AMF effects on other plant traits, the relative impacts of AMF on vegetative growth versus floral traits, or AMF-induced intraspecific variation in traits. METHODS: In an experimental greenhouse study, we inoculated seven species of wildflowers with six species of AMF in a factorial design. We assessed how the AMF-forb combinations influenced plant survival, vegetative biomass, and floral traits and whether AMF effects on floral traits were similar in magnitude and direction to effects on vegetative biomass. For one forb species, we investigated intraspecific plant trait variation within and across AMF treatments. RESULTS: AMF species varied from negative to positive in their effects on host plants. AMF often had inconsistent effects on vegetative biomass versus floral traits, and therefore, quantifying one or the other may provide a misleading representation of potential AMF effects. AMF treatments generated key variation in plant traits, especially floral traits, with potential consequences for plant-pollinator interactions. Given increased intraspecific trait variation in Linum lewisii plants across AMF species compared to uninoculated individuals or single AMF treatments, local AMF diversity and their host plant associations may scale up to influence community-wide patterns of trait variation and species interactions. CONCLUSIONS: These results have implications for predicting how aboveground communities are affected by belowground communities. Including AMF effects on not just host plant biomass but also functional traits and trait variation will deepen our understanding of community structure and function, including pollination.


Subject(s)
Mycorrhizae , Biomass , Pollination , Phenotype , Plants , Plant Roots/microbiology
2.
Microb Ecol ; 65(1): 171-9, 2013 Jan.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22926501

ABSTRACT

Geothermal influenced soils exert unique physical and chemical limitations on resident microbial communities but have received little attention in microbial ecology research. These environments offer a model system in which to investigate microbial community heterogeneity and a range of soil ecological concepts. We conducted a 16S bar-coded pyrosequencing survey of the prokaryotic communities in a diatomaceous geothermal soil system and compared communities across soil types and along a conspicuous photic depth gradient. We found significant differences between the communities of the two different soils and also predictable differences between samples taken at different depths. Additionally, we targeted three ecologically relevant bacterial phyla, Cyanobacteria, Planctomycetes, and Verrucomicrobia, for clade-wise comparisons with these variables and found strong differences in their abundances, consistent with the autecology of these groups.


Subject(s)
Ecosystem , Metagenome , Soil Microbiology , Soil/analysis , Cyanobacteria/genetics , Cyanobacteria/isolation & purification , DNA Barcoding, Taxonomic , DNA, Bacterial/genetics , Diatomaceous Earth , Hot Springs/microbiology , Phylogeny , Planctomycetales/genetics , Planctomycetales/isolation & purification , RNA, Ribosomal, 16S/genetics , Verrucomicrobia/genetics , Verrucomicrobia/isolation & purification , Wyoming
3.
FEMS Microbiol Ecol ; 82(1): 182-91, 2012 Oct.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22594350

ABSTRACT

Knowledge of microbial communities and their inherent heterogeneity has dramatically increased with the widespread use of high-throughput sequencing technologies, and we are learning more about the ecological processes that structure microbial communities across a wide range of environments, as well as the relative scales of importance for describing bacterial communities in natural systems. Little work has been carried out to assess fine-scale eukaryotic microbial heterogeneity in soils. Here, we present findings from a bar-coded 18S rRNA survey of the eukaryotic microbial communities in a previously unstudied geothermal diatomaceous biological soil crust in Yellowstone National Park, WY, USA, in which we explicitly compare microbial community heterogeneity at the particle scale within soil cores. Multivariate analysis of community composition showed that while subsamples from within the same soil core clustered together, community dissimilarity between particles in the same core was high. This study describes a novel soil microbial environment and also adds to our growing understanding of microbial heterogeneity and the scales relevant to the study of soil microbial communities.


Subject(s)
Bacteria/classification , Ecosystem , Hot Springs/microbiology , Soil Microbiology , Soil/analysis , Bacteria/genetics , Cluster Analysis , DNA, Bacterial/genetics , Multivariate Analysis , RNA, Ribosomal, 18S/genetics , Sequence Analysis, DNA , Wyoming
4.
Oecologia ; 170(1): 111-22, 2012 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22437908

ABSTRACT

In flowering plants, soil heterogeneity can generate divergent natural selection over fine spatial scales, and thus promote local adaptation in the absence of geographic barriers to gene flow. Here, we investigate phenotypic and genetic differentiation in one of the few flowering plants that thrives in both geothermal and non-thermal soils in Yellowstone National Park (YNP). Yellow monkeyflowers (Mimulus guttatus) growing at two geothermal ("thermal") sites in YNP were distinct in growth form and phenology from paired populations growing nearby (<500 m distant) in non-thermal soils. In simulated thermal and non-thermal environments, thermal plants remained significantly divergent from non-thermal plants in vegetative, floral, mating system, and phenological traits. Plants from both thermal populations flowered closer to the ground, allocated relatively more to sexual reproduction, were more likely to initiate flowering under short daylengths, and made smaller flowers that could efficiently self-fertilize without pollinators. These shared differences are consistent with local adaptation to life in the ephemeral window for growth and reproduction created by winter and spring snowmelt on hot soils. In contrast, habitat type (thermal vs. non-thermal) explained little of the genetic variation at neutral markers. Instead, we found that one thermal population (Agrostis Headquarters; AHQ-T) was strongly differentiated from all other populations (all F (ST) > 0.34), which were only weakly differentiated from each other (all F (ST) < 0.07). Phenotypic differentiation of thermal M. guttatus, but little population genetic evidence of long-term ecotypic divergence, encourages further investigations of the potential for fine-scale adaptation and reproductive isolation across the geothermal gradient in Yellowstone.


Subject(s)
Flowers , Genetic Variation , Mimulus/genetics , Adaptation, Physiological , Ecology , Genetic Markers , Mimulus/growth & development , Montana , Phenotype , Pollination , Reproduction , Soil , Temperature
5.
New Phytol ; 194(3): 800-809, 2012 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22432474

ABSTRACT

• The influence of plant communities on symbiotic arbuscular mycorrhizal fungal (AMF) communities is difficult to study in situ as both symbionts are strongly influenced by some of the same soil and environmental conditions, and thus we have a poor understanding of the potential links in community composition and structure between host and fungal communities. • AMF were characterized in colonized roots of thermal soil Mimulus guttatus in both isolated plants supporting AMF for only a few months of the growing season and plants growing in mixed plant communities composed of annual and perennial hosts. Cluster and discriminant analysis were used to compare competing models based on either communities or soil conditions. • Mimulus guttatus in adjacent contrasting plant community situations harbored distinct AMF communities with few fungal taxa occurring in both community types. Isolated plants harbored communities of fewer fungal taxa with lower diversity than plants in mixed communities. Host community type was more indicative than pH of AMF community structure. • Our results support an inherent relationship between host plant and AMF community structures, although pH-based models were also statistically supported.


Subject(s)
Glomeromycota/physiology , Mimulus/microbiology , Mycorrhizae/physiology , Symbiosis , Base Sequence , Biodiversity , Cluster Analysis , DNA, Fungal/chemistry , DNA, Fungal/genetics , Ecosystem , Glomeromycota/classification , Glomeromycota/genetics , Glomeromycota/isolation & purification , Hydrogen-Ion Concentration , Mimulus/genetics , Mimulus/physiology , Models, Biological , Molecular Sequence Data , Mycorrhizae/classification , Mycorrhizae/genetics , Mycorrhizae/isolation & purification , Phylogeny , Plant Roots/genetics , Plant Roots/microbiology , Plant Roots/physiology , Seasons , Sequence Analysis, DNA , Soil/chemistry , Species Specificity , Wyoming
6.
Ecology ; 92(6): 1292-302, 2011 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21797157

ABSTRACT

The relative importance of dispersal and niche restrictions remains a controversial topic in community ecology, especially for microorganisms that are often assumed to be ubiquitous. We investigated the impact of these factors for the community assembly of the root-symbiont arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi (AMF) by sampling roots from geothermal and nonthermal grasslands in Yellowstone National Park (YNP), followed by sequencing and RFLP of AMF ribosomal DNA. With the exception of an apparent generalist RFLP type closely related to Glomus intraradices, a distance-based redundancy analysis indicated that the AMF community composition correlated with soil pH or pH-driven changes in soil chemistry. This was unexpected, given the large differences in soil temperature and plant community composition between the geothermal and nonthermal grasslands. RFLP types were found in either the acidic geothermal grasslands or in the neutral to alkaline grasslands, one of which was geothermal. The direct effect of the soil chemical environment on the distribution of two AMF morphospecies isolated from acidic geothermal grasslands was supported in a controlled greenhouse experiment. Paraglomus occultum and Scutellospora pellucida were more beneficial to plants and formed significantly more spores when grown in acidic than in alkaline soil. Distance among grasslands, used as an estimate of dispersal limitations, was not a significant predictor of AMF community similarity within YNP, and most fungal taxa may be part of a metacommunity. The isolation of several viable AMF taxa from bison feces indicates that wide-ranging bison could be a vector for at least some RFLP types among grasslands within YNP. In support of classical niche theory and the Baas-Becking hypothesis, our results suggest that AMF are not limited by dispersal at the scale of YNP, but that the soil environment appears to be the primary factor affecting community composition and distribution.


Subject(s)
Ecosystem , Hot Springs , Mycorrhizae , Soil Microbiology , Soil/chemistry , Animals , Bison , Hydrogen-Ion Concentration , Mycorrhizae/classification , Mycorrhizae/genetics , Poaceae/microbiology , Polymorphism, Restriction Fragment Length , Temperature , Wyoming
7.
Microb Ecol ; 56(4): 649-59, 2008 Nov.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-18449467

ABSTRACT

To better understand adaptation of plants and their mycorrhizae to extreme environmental conditions, we analyzed the composition of communities of arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi (AMF) in roots from geothermal sites in Yellowstone National Park (YNP), USA. Arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi were identified using molecular methods including seven specific primer pairs for regions of the ribosomal DNA that amplify different subgroups of AMF. Roots of Dichanthelium lanuginosum, a grass only occurring in geothermal areas, were sampled along with thermal and nonthermal Agrostis scabra and control plants growing outside the thermally influenced sites. In addition, root samples of Agrostis stolonifera from geothermal areas of Iceland were analyzed to identify possible common mycosymbionts between these geographically isolated locations. In YNP, 16 ribosomal DNA phylotypes belonging to the genera Archaeospora, Glomus, Paraglomus, Scutellospora, and Acaulospora were detected. Eight of these phylotypes could be assigned to known morphospecies, two others have been reported previously in molecular studies from different environments, and six were new to science. The most diverse and abundant lineage was Glomus group A, with the most frequent phylotype corresponding to Glomus intraradices. Five of the seven phylotypes detected in a preliminary sampling in a geothermal area in Iceland were also found in YNP. Nonthermal vegetation was dominated by a high diversity of Glomus group A phylotypes while nonthermal plants were not. Using multivariate analyses, a subset of three phylotypes were determined to be associated with geothermal conditions in the field sites analyzed. In conclusion, AMF communities in geothermal soils are distinct in their composition, including both unique phylotypes and generalist fungi that occur across a broad range of environmental conditions.


Subject(s)
Ecosystem , Mycorrhizae/genetics , Plant Roots/microbiology , DNA, Ribosomal Spacer/genetics , Molecular Sequence Data , Mycorrhizae/classification , Mycorrhizae/growth & development , Phylogeny , Poaceae/microbiology , Polymerase Chain Reaction , RNA, Ribosomal, 18S/genetics , RNA, Ribosomal, 5.8S/genetics , Sequence Analysis, DNA , Soil/analysis , Wyoming
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