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Journal ArticleDOI

Alien plants associate with widespread generalist arbuscular mycorrhizal fungal taxa: evidence from a continental‐scale study using massively parallel 454 sequencing

TLDR
AM fungal communities in the native, invasive and experimentally introduced ranges varied in taxonomic composition and richness, but they shared a pool of geographically widespread, non-host-specific taxa that might support the invasion of a generalist alien plant.
Abstract
Aim The biogeography of arbuscular mycorrhizal (AM) fungi is poorly understood, and consequently the potential of AM fungi to determine plant distribution has been largely overlooked. We aimed to describe AM fungal communities associating with a single host-plant species across a wide geographical area, including the plant’s native, invasive and experimentally introduced ranges. We hypothesized that an alien AM plant associates primarily with the geographically widespread generalist AM fungal taxa present in a novel range. Location  Europe, China. Methods  We transplanted the palm Trachycarpus fortunei into nine European sites where it does not occur as a native species, into one site where it is naturalized (Switzerland), and into one glasshouse site. We harvested plant roots after two seasons. In addition, we sampled palms at three sites in the plant’s native range (China). Roots were subjected to DNA extraction, polymerase chain reaction (PCR) and 454 sequencing of AM fungal sequences. We analysed fungal communities with non-metric multidimensional scaling (NMDS) ordination and cluster analysis and studied the frequency of geographically widespread fungal taxa with log-linear analysis. We compared fungal communities in the roots of the palm with those in resident plants at one site in the introduced range (Estonia) where natural AM fungal communities had previously been studied. Results  We recorded a total of 73 AM fungal taxa. AM fungal communities in the native and introduced ranges differed from one another, while those in the invasive range contained taxa present in both other ranges. Geographically widespread AM fungal taxa were over-represented in palm roots in all regions, but especially in the introduced range. At the Estonian site, the palm was colonized by the same community of widespread AM fungal taxa as associate with resident habitat-generalist plants; by contrast, resident forest-specialist plants were colonized by a diverse community of widespread and other AM fungal taxa. Main conclusions  AM fungal communities in the native, invasive and experimentally introduced ranges varied in taxonomic composition and richness, but they shared a pool of geographically widespread, non-host-specific taxa that might support the invasion of a generalist alien plant. Our dataset provides the first geographical overview of AM taxon distributions obtained using a single host-plant species.

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Citations
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High-Coverage ITS Primers for the DNA-Based Identification of Ascomycetes and Basidiomycetes in Environmental Samples

TL;DR: New ITS primers with improved coverage across diverse taxonomic groups of fungi compared to existing primers are designed to provide a basis for ecological studies on the diversity and community structures of fungi in the era of massive DNA sequencing.
Journal ArticleDOI

Mutualistic Interactions and Biological Invasions

TL;DR: This work identifies traits that influence invasiveness or invasibility through mutualistic interactions and examines the key mechanisms whereby such positive interactions mediate invasions and are in turn influenced by invasions.
Journal ArticleDOI

Species richness of arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi: associations with grassland plant richness and biomass

TL;DR: The results indicate that AMF richness and plant belowground richness are more strongly related with each other and with plant community biomass than with the plant aboveground richness measures that have been almost exclusively considered to date.
Journal ArticleDOI

Arbuscular mycorrhizal fungal communities in plant roots are not random assemblages

TL;DR: The habitat range of the host and a possible interaction with season played a role in the assembly of AMF communities in individual plant root systems, and it was shown that generalist plants tend to associate with generalist AMF.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

A new method for non-parametric multivariate analysis of variance

TL;DR: In this article, a non-parametric method for multivariate analysis of variance, based on sums of squared distances, is proposed. But it is not suitable for most ecological multivariate data sets.
Journal ArticleDOI

A new fungal phylum, the Glomeromycota: phylogeny and evolution

TL;DR: The ecologically and economically important arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi, crucial in the ecology and physiology of land plants, and the endocytobiotic fungus, Geosiphon pyriformis, are phylogenetically analysed by their small subunit (SSU) rRNA gene sequences and placed into a new monophyletic phylum, the Glomeromycota.
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Feedback with soil biota contributes to plant rarity and invasiveness in communities.

TL;DR: The results indicate that plants have different abilities to influence their abundance by changing the structure of their soil communities, and that this is an important regulator of plant community structure.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Jalview Java alignment editor

TL;DR: The Jalview Java alignment editor is presented here, which enables fast viewing and editing of large multiple sequence alignments.
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