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Diversity of arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi across a fragmented forest in Panama: insular spore communities differ from mainland communities
Authors:Email author" target="_blank">Scott?A?ManganEmail author  Ahn-Heum?Eom  Gregory?H?Adler  Joseph?B?Yavitt  Edward?A?Herre
Affiliation:(1) Department of Biology, Indiana University, Bloomington, IN 47405, USA;(2) Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute, Apartado 2072, 2072 Balboa, Republic of Panama;(3) Institute of Natural Science, Korea National University of Education, Chungbuck, 363-791, Republic of Korea;(4) Department of Biology, University of Wisconsin, Oshkosh, WI 54901, USA;(5) Department of Natural Resources, Cornell University, Ithaca, NY 14853, USA
Abstract:It is now understood that alterations in the species composition of soil organisms can lead to changes in aboveground communities. In this study, we assessed the importance of spatial scale and forest size on changes in arbuscular mycorrhizal fungal (AMF) spore communities by sampling AMF spores in soils of forested mainland and island sites in the vicinity of Gatun Lake, Republic of Panama. We encountered a total of 27 AMF species or morphospecies, with 17, 8, 1 and 1 from the genera Glomus, Acaulospora, Sclerosystis, and Scutellospora, respectively. At small scales (<100 m2), we found little evidence for spatial structuring of AMF communities (decay of Morisita-Horn community similarity with distance). However, at large spatial scales, we found that the AMF spore community of a mainland plot was more similar to other mainland plots several kilometers (>5) away than to nearby island plots (within 0.7 km). Likewise, most island plots were more similar to other island plots regardless of geographic separation. There was no decay in AMF species richness (number of species), or Shannon diversity (number of species and their spore numbers) either with decreasing forest-fragment size, or with decreasing plant species richness. Of the six most common species that composed almost 70% of the total spore volume, spores of Glomus ldquotshrdquo and G. clavisporum were more common in soils of mainland plots, while spores of Glomus ldquosmall brownrdquo and Acaulospora mellea were more abundant in soils of island plots. None of these common AMF species showed significant associations with soil chemistry or plant diversity. We suggest that the convergence of common species found in AMF spore communities in soils of similar forest sizes was a result of forest fragmentation. Habitat-dependent convergence of AMF spore communities may result in differential survival of tree seedlings regenerating on islands versus mainland.
Keywords:Fungal spores  Species diversity  Community assemblage  Forest fragmentation
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