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Host-, Geographic-, and Ecological Specificity of Endophytic and Endolichenic Fungal Communities

As one of the most diverse and ecologically important clades of life, fungi are best known as pathogens, saprotrophs, mycorrhizae, and lichens. Yet an enormous amount of previously unknown diversity occurs among endophytic and endolichenic fungi--species-rich, horizontally transmitted fungi that live within asymptomatic photosynthetic structures such as leaves and lichens. Here, I explore the biodiversity of these understudied symbiotrophs and the ecological and biogeographic factors influencing their communities.To evaluate methods currently used in ecological studies of environmental samples of fungi, I assessed inter- and intraspecific divergence of a fast-evolving locus for four genera commonly found as endophytes, and compared analytical methods for identifying and delimiting OTUs. Then I used the most robust methods to show that after soil contact, seeds of a focal tree species contain diverse fungi that are closely related to endophytes and pathogens.To explore the ecological specificity of symbiotrophic fungi, I examined endophytic, endolichenic, and saprotrophic communities inhabiting physically proximate hosts in a biotically rich area of southeastern Arizona. I found that endolichenic fungi are largely distinct from plant-associated fungi, with the exception of a group of ecologically flexible symbionts that occur in lichens and mosses. Although numerous endophytes were found in non-living leaves, fungi that were highly abundant in leaf litter were seldom found as endophytes.To assess symbiotroph biodiversity and ecological specificity at a broad geographic and phylogenetic scale, I isolated>4100 endophytic and endolichenic fungi from diverse communities of plants and lichens across five climatic regions in North America. I found that the abundance, diversity, and composition of these nearly ubiquitous fungi differ as a function of climate, locality, and host. Differences among communities reflect environmental characteristics more strongly than geographic distance.Last, I addressed a series of hypotheses regarding the ecological specificity of fungi inhabiting living and non-living leaves. I show that like endophytes, saprotrophic communities are structured by environmental characteristics, and at small spatial scales by host and leaf status. Yet, differences in communities between living leaves and leaf litter suggest that most endophytes either rapidly complete their life-cycle or are out-competed by robust saprotrophs once leaves senesce.

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:arizona.edu/oai:arizona.openrepository.com:10150/202977
Date January 2011
CreatorsU'Ren, Jana M.
ContributorsArnold, Anne Elizabeth, VanEtten, Hans, Orbach, Marc, Bronstein, Judith L., Sullivan, Matthew
PublisherThe University of Arizona.
Source SetsUniversity of Arizona
LanguageEnglish
Detected LanguageEnglish
Typetext, Electronic Dissertation
RightsCopyright © is held by the author. Digital access to this material is made possible by the University Libraries, University of Arizona. Further transmission, reproduction or presentation (such as public display or performance) of protected items is prohibited except with permission of the author.

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