Journal
MYCOLOGIA
Volume 106, Issue 1, Pages 8-21Publisher
TAYLOR & FRANCIS INC
DOI: 10.3852/13-098
Keywords
Ascomycota; diversity; fungal endophytes; host affiliation; tropical forest
Categories
Funding
- College of Agriculture and Life Sciences (CALS) at the University of Arizona (UA)
- government of Mexico
- CALS
- School of Plant Sciences (UA)
- Organization for Tropical Studies
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Ferns are an ancient and diverse lineage of vascular plants that differ morphologically, chemically and in growth habits from the angiosperms with which they co-occur. We used a culture-based approach coupled with phylogenetic analyses to characterize the incidence, diversity and composition of fungal endophyte assemblages in ferns, with a focus on healthy aboveground tissues of seven species of eupolypods at La Selva, Costa Rica. Endophytes were isolated from every individual plant and were similarly abundant and diverse in frond blades and stalks, in different vegetation types, in epiphytic vs. terrestrial species, and between sampling years. However, abundance, diversity and community structure differed significantly among fern species, and composition differed markedly between sampling years. Phylogenetic classification using separate and combined datasets revealed that as for many Neotropical angiosperms, the majority (95%) of endophyte taxa were Ascomycota, with particular dominance by Sordariomycetes, Eurotiomycetes and Dothideomycetes. However, our data suggest higher phylogenetic richness and stronger host affinities in fern associated endophytes relative to those studied in angiosperms thus far.
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