4.7 Article

Protocorm-Supporting Fungi Are Retained in Roots of Mature Tipularia discolor Orchids as Mycorrhizal Fungal Diversity Increases

Journal

PLANTS-BASEL
Volume 10, Issue 6, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/plants10061251

Keywords

Orchidaceae; orchid mycorrhizae; protocorm fungi; mycorrhizal diversity

Categories

Funding

  1. U.S. National Science Foundation [DEB 0316523, DBI 0353759]

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The study found that the temperate terrestrial orchid Tipularia discolor retains protocorm fungi into maturity, whether they are growing in persistent decomposing wood or soil. Protocorm fungi are not restricted to decomposing wood but are more common and abundant in it. This suggests that the mycorrhizal fungi associated with T. discolor change during individual ontogeny.
Mycorrhizal fungi are critical to understanding the distribution patterns of many plants, but they are especially important for orchids. Some orchids may change the mycorrhizal fungi they use through their lives, either in response to changes in abiotic or biotic conditions, or as a result of ontogenetic changes that alter the orchid's need for fungal nutrition. The temperate terrestrial orchid Tipularia discolor germinates only on decomposing wood, but often persists well after the wood has completely decomposed and has been incorporated into the soil. We used PCR and Sanger sequencing to ask: (1) Do mature T. discolor retain protocorm fungi or are protocorm and adult mycorrhizal fungi mutually exclusive? (2) Are protocorm fungi limited to areas with decomposing wood? (3) Does the abundance of protocorm fungi in the substrate differ between decomposing wood and bare soil? We found that T. discolor retained protocorm fungi into maturity, regardless of whether they were growing in persistent decomposing wood or soil. Protocorm fungi were not restricted to decomposing wood but were more common and abundant in it. We conclude that the mycorrhizal fungi associated with T. discolor change during the ontogeny of individuals. These results highlight the importance of assessing protocorm fungi, in addition to mycorrhizal fungi associating with adult orchids, to understand the conditions needed for orchid germination, growth, and reproduction.

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