Host plant environmental filtering drives foliar fungal community assembly in symptomatic leaves

  • Xiang Liu
  • , Pu Jia
  • , Marc W. Cadotte
  • , Chen Zhu
  • , Xingfeng Si
  • , Yunquan Wang
  • , Fei Chen
  • , Jihua Wu
  • , Shurong Zhou*
  • *Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

14 Scopus citations

Abstract

Foliar fungi (defined as all fungal species in leaves after surface sterilization; hereafter, ‘FF’) are of great importance to host plant growth and health, and can also affect ecosystem functioning. Despite this importance, few studies have explicitly examined the role of host filtering in shaping local FF communities, and we know little about the differences of FF community assembly between symptomatic (caused by fungal pathogens) and asymptomatic leaves, and whether there is phylogenetic congruence between host plants and FF. We examined FF communities from 25 host plant species (for each species, symptomatic and asymptomatic leaves, respectively) in an alpine meadow of the Tibetan Plateau using MiSeq sequencing of ITS1 gene biomarkers. We evaluated the phylogenetic congruence of FF–plant interactions based on cophylogenetic analysis, and examined α- and β-phylogenetic diversity indices of the FF communities. We found strong support for phylogenetic congruence between host plants and FF for both asymptomatic and symptomatic leaves, and a host-caused filter appears to play a major role in shaping FF communities. Most importantly, we provided independent lines of evidence that host environmental filtering (caused by fungal infections) outweighs competitive exclusion in driving FF community assembly in symptomatic leaves. Our results help strengthen the foundation of FF community assembly by demonstrating the importance of host environmental filtering in driving FF community assembly.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)737-749
Number of pages13
JournalOecologia
Volume195
Issue number3
DOIs
StatePublished - Mar 2021

Keywords

  • Alpine meadow
  • Endophyte
  • Foliar fungal disease
  • Host filter
  • Phylogenetic congruence

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