4.6 Article

Evidence for phylogenetic correlation of plant-AMF assemblages?

期刊

ANNALS OF BOTANY
卷 115, 期 2, 页码 171-177

出版社

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/aob/mcu228

关键词

Arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi; AMF; biotic interactions; community assemblages; facilitation; phylogenetic composition; plant guilds; vegetation patches; xeric shrubland

资金

  1. AECID [A017475/08, A023461/09]
  2. DGAPA-UNAM [IN-202811-3, IN-213414-3]
  3. CYTED [409AC0369]
  4. MICINN [CGL2011-29585-C02-01]
  5. DGAPA-UNAM
  6. Early Career Project Grant from the BES [3975-4849]
  7. 'Ramon y Cajal' post-doctoral contract from MICINN

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Background and Aims Specificity in biotic interactions is mediated' by functional traits inducing shifts in the community species composition. Functional traits are often evolutionarily conserved, resulting in closely related species tending to interact with similar species. This tendency may initially shape the phylogenetic composition of coexisting guilds, but other intraguild ecological processes may either blur or promote the mirroring of the phylogenetic compositions between guilds. The roles of intra-and interguild interactions in shaping the phylogenetic community composition are largely unknown, beyond the mere selectivity in the interguild interactions. Plant facilitation is a phylogenetically structured species-specific process involving interactions not only between the same guild of plants, but also between plants and other guilds such as arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi (AMF). In this study it is hypothesized that reciprocal plant-AMF interactions will leave an interdependent phylogenetic signal in the community composition of both plants and AMF. Methods A correlation was used to test for a relationship between the phylogenetic composition of plant and AMF assemblages in a patchy xeric shrubland environment shaped by plant facilitation. In addition, a null model was used to test whether this correlation can be solely explained by selectivity in plant-AMF interactions. Key Results A significant correlation was observed between the phylogenetic composition of plant and AMF assemblages. Plant phylogenetic composition in a patch was related to the predominance of plant species with high nursery quality that can influence the community assembly. AMF phylogenetic composition was related to the AMF phylogenetic diversity in each patch. Conclusions This study shows that shifts in the phylogenetic composition of plants and AMF assemblages do not occur independently. It is suggested that besides selectivity in plant-AMF interactions, inter-related succession dynamics of plants and AMF within patches could be an ecological mechanism driving community assembly. Future lines of research might explore whether interlinked above-and below-ground dynamics could be occurring across multiple guilds simultaneously.

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