The role of fungal taxa and developmental stage of mushrooms in determining the composition of the mycophagous insect community in a Japanese forest

We hypothesize that differences in fungal taxonomic groups may exert a direct influence on the composition of mycophagous insect communities, and that the relative importance of taxonomy compared to other fungal traits may change as the mushrooms decay. We conducted a 3-year field survey and analyze...

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Main Authors: Satoshi YAMASHITA, Naoki HIJII
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Institute of Entomology, Biology Centre, Czech Academy of Science 2007-04-01
Series:European Journal of Entomology
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.eje.cz/artkey/eje-200702-0011_The_role_of_fungal_taxa_and_developmental_stage_of_mushrooms_in_determining_the_composition_of_the_mycophagous.php
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spelling doaj-3665215fffbe4fc0b65c8602291c3b2a2021-04-16T20:34:15ZengInstitute of Entomology, Biology Centre, Czech Academy of ScienceEuropean Journal of Entomology1210-57591802-88292007-04-01104222523310.14411/eje.2007.035eje-200702-0011The role of fungal taxa and developmental stage of mushrooms in determining the composition of the mycophagous insect community in a Japanese forestSatoshi YAMASHITANaoki HIJII0Laboratory of Forest Protection, Graduate School of Bioagricultural Sciences, Nagoya University, Nagoya 464-8601, JapanWe hypothesize that differences in fungal taxonomic groups may exert a direct influence on the composition of mycophagous insect communities, and that the relative importance of taxonomy compared to other fungal traits may change as the mushrooms decay. We conducted a 3-year field survey and analyzed the species composition of mycophagous insect communities using partial canonical correspondence analysis (partial CCA). We collected 2457 mushrooms belonging to 27 genera, and 4616 insects belonging to 16 families emerged from 439 of the mushrooms. For the whole insect community, fungal genera explained 10-19% of the total variance in the family composition of the insect communities of mushrooms at different developmental stages. Only the fungal genus Collybia significantly affected the community composition almost irrespective of developmental stage. In the drosophilid community, which consisted of 844 individuals from 9 species, fungal genera explained 19-34% of the total variance. Some fungal genera, such as Amanita and Collybia, affected the drosophilid community, but not at all developmental stages. The number of fungal genera that significantly affected the insect community composition did not differ among fungal stages both in the whole insect community and in the drosophilid community. Thus, our former hypothesis was supported by the present analysis, whereas the latter was not. However, the percentages of variance explained by fungal genera were rather small. This suggests that the importance of fungal genera is likely to be less significant than that of other selection pressures in determining the species composition of mycophagous insect communities.https://www.eje.cz/artkey/eje-200702-0011_The_role_of_fungal_taxa_and_developmental_stage_of_mushrooms_in_determining_the_composition_of_the_mycophagous.phpchemical componentscommunity structuremicrobesmushroomsmycophagous insects
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Satoshi YAMASHITA
Naoki HIJII
spellingShingle Satoshi YAMASHITA
Naoki HIJII
The role of fungal taxa and developmental stage of mushrooms in determining the composition of the mycophagous insect community in a Japanese forest
European Journal of Entomology
chemical components
community structure
microbes
mushrooms
mycophagous insects
author_facet Satoshi YAMASHITA
Naoki HIJII
author_sort Satoshi YAMASHITA
title The role of fungal taxa and developmental stage of mushrooms in determining the composition of the mycophagous insect community in a Japanese forest
title_short The role of fungal taxa and developmental stage of mushrooms in determining the composition of the mycophagous insect community in a Japanese forest
title_full The role of fungal taxa and developmental stage of mushrooms in determining the composition of the mycophagous insect community in a Japanese forest
title_fullStr The role of fungal taxa and developmental stage of mushrooms in determining the composition of the mycophagous insect community in a Japanese forest
title_full_unstemmed The role of fungal taxa and developmental stage of mushrooms in determining the composition of the mycophagous insect community in a Japanese forest
title_sort role of fungal taxa and developmental stage of mushrooms in determining the composition of the mycophagous insect community in a japanese forest
publisher Institute of Entomology, Biology Centre, Czech Academy of Science
series European Journal of Entomology
issn 1210-5759
1802-8829
publishDate 2007-04-01
description We hypothesize that differences in fungal taxonomic groups may exert a direct influence on the composition of mycophagous insect communities, and that the relative importance of taxonomy compared to other fungal traits may change as the mushrooms decay. We conducted a 3-year field survey and analyzed the species composition of mycophagous insect communities using partial canonical correspondence analysis (partial CCA). We collected 2457 mushrooms belonging to 27 genera, and 4616 insects belonging to 16 families emerged from 439 of the mushrooms. For the whole insect community, fungal genera explained 10-19% of the total variance in the family composition of the insect communities of mushrooms at different developmental stages. Only the fungal genus Collybia significantly affected the community composition almost irrespective of developmental stage. In the drosophilid community, which consisted of 844 individuals from 9 species, fungal genera explained 19-34% of the total variance. Some fungal genera, such as Amanita and Collybia, affected the drosophilid community, but not at all developmental stages. The number of fungal genera that significantly affected the insect community composition did not differ among fungal stages both in the whole insect community and in the drosophilid community. Thus, our former hypothesis was supported by the present analysis, whereas the latter was not. However, the percentages of variance explained by fungal genera were rather small. This suggests that the importance of fungal genera is likely to be less significant than that of other selection pressures in determining the species composition of mycophagous insect communities.
topic chemical components
community structure
microbes
mushrooms
mycophagous insects
url https://www.eje.cz/artkey/eje-200702-0011_The_role_of_fungal_taxa_and_developmental_stage_of_mushrooms_in_determining_the_composition_of_the_mycophagous.php
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