Taxa-area relationship of aquatic fungi on deciduous leaves.

One of the fundamental patterns in macroecology is the increase in the number of observed taxa with size of sampled area. For microbes, the shape of this relationship remains less clear. The current study assessed the diversity of aquatic fungi, by the traditional approach based on conidial morpholo...

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Main Authors: Sofia Duarte, Fernanda Cássio, Cláudia Pascoal, Felix Bärlocher
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2017-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0181545
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spelling doaj-fffcab0488aa47f0a5c316465ef250902021-03-03T20:32:41ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032017-01-01127e018154510.1371/journal.pone.0181545Taxa-area relationship of aquatic fungi on deciduous leaves.Sofia DuarteFernanda CássioCláudia PascoalFelix BärlocherOne of the fundamental patterns in macroecology is the increase in the number of observed taxa with size of sampled area. For microbes, the shape of this relationship remains less clear. The current study assessed the diversity of aquatic fungi, by the traditional approach based on conidial morphology (captures reproducing aquatic hyphomycetes) and next generation sequencing (NGS; captures other fungi as well), on graded sizes of alder leaves (0.6 to 13.6 cm2). Leaves were submerged in two streams in geographically distant locations: the Oliveira Stream in Portugal and the Boss Brook in Canada. Decay rates of alder leaves and fungal sporulation rates did not differ between streams. Fungal biomass was higher in Boss Brook than in Oliveira Stream, and in both streams almost 100% of the reads belonged to active fungal taxa. In general, larger leaf areas tended to harbour more fungi, but these findings were not consistent between techniques. Morphospecies-based diversity increased with leaf area in Boss Brook, but not in Oliveira Stream; metabarcoding data showed an opposite trend. The higher resolution of metabarcoding resulted in steeper taxa-accumulation curves than morphospecies-based assessments (fungal conidia morphology). Fungal communities assessed by metabarcoding were spatially structured by leaf area in both streams. Metabarcoding promises greater resolution to assess biodiversity patterns in aquatic fungi and may be more accurate for assessing taxa-area relationships and local to global diversity ratios.https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0181545
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Sofia Duarte
Fernanda Cássio
Cláudia Pascoal
Felix Bärlocher
spellingShingle Sofia Duarte
Fernanda Cássio
Cláudia Pascoal
Felix Bärlocher
Taxa-area relationship of aquatic fungi on deciduous leaves.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Sofia Duarte
Fernanda Cássio
Cláudia Pascoal
Felix Bärlocher
author_sort Sofia Duarte
title Taxa-area relationship of aquatic fungi on deciduous leaves.
title_short Taxa-area relationship of aquatic fungi on deciduous leaves.
title_full Taxa-area relationship of aquatic fungi on deciduous leaves.
title_fullStr Taxa-area relationship of aquatic fungi on deciduous leaves.
title_full_unstemmed Taxa-area relationship of aquatic fungi on deciduous leaves.
title_sort taxa-area relationship of aquatic fungi on deciduous leaves.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2017-01-01
description One of the fundamental patterns in macroecology is the increase in the number of observed taxa with size of sampled area. For microbes, the shape of this relationship remains less clear. The current study assessed the diversity of aquatic fungi, by the traditional approach based on conidial morphology (captures reproducing aquatic hyphomycetes) and next generation sequencing (NGS; captures other fungi as well), on graded sizes of alder leaves (0.6 to 13.6 cm2). Leaves were submerged in two streams in geographically distant locations: the Oliveira Stream in Portugal and the Boss Brook in Canada. Decay rates of alder leaves and fungal sporulation rates did not differ between streams. Fungal biomass was higher in Boss Brook than in Oliveira Stream, and in both streams almost 100% of the reads belonged to active fungal taxa. In general, larger leaf areas tended to harbour more fungi, but these findings were not consistent between techniques. Morphospecies-based diversity increased with leaf area in Boss Brook, but not in Oliveira Stream; metabarcoding data showed an opposite trend. The higher resolution of metabarcoding resulted in steeper taxa-accumulation curves than morphospecies-based assessments (fungal conidia morphology). Fungal communities assessed by metabarcoding were spatially structured by leaf area in both streams. Metabarcoding promises greater resolution to assess biodiversity patterns in aquatic fungi and may be more accurate for assessing taxa-area relationships and local to global diversity ratios.
url https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0181545
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AT felixbarlocher taxaarearelationshipofaquaticfungiondeciduousleaves
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