Chapter 13 Wood-decay basidiomycetes in boreal forests: Distribution and community development

Author(s):  
Jan Stenlid ◽  
Reijo Penttilä ◽  
Anders Dahlberg
2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sundy Maurice ◽  
Havard Kauserud ◽  
Tone Birkemoe ◽  
Rannveig Jacobsen ◽  
Anne Sverdrup-Thygeson ◽  
...  

Biological communities within living organisms are structured by their host's traits. How host traits affect biodiversity and community composition is poorly explored for some associations, such as arthropods within fungal fruit bodies. Using DNA metabarcoding, we revealed the arthropod communities in living fruit bodies of eleven wood-decay fungi from boreal forests and investigated how they were affected by different fungal traits. Arthropod diversity was higher in fruit bodies with a larger surface area-to-volume ratio, suggesting that colonisation is crucial to maintain arthropod populations. Diversity was not higher in long-lived fruit bodies, most likely because these fungi invest in physical or chemical defences against arthropods. Arthropod community composition was structured by all measured host traits, namely fruit body size, thickness, surface area, morphology and toughness. Notably, we identified a community gradient where soft and short-lived fruit bodies harboured more true flies, while tougher and long-lived fruit bodies had more oribatid mites and beetles, which might reflect different development times of the arthropods. Ultimately, close to 75% of the arthropods were specific to one or two fungal hosts. Besides revealing surprisingly diverse and host-specific arthropod communities within fungal fruit bodies, our study provided insight on how host traits structure communities.


2009 ◽  
Author(s):  
Richard W. Franke ◽  
Kenneth Brook ◽  
Neeraj Vedwan ◽  
Elaine Gerber ◽  
Katherine McCaffrey

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