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      Linking the community structure of arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi and plants: a story of interdependence?

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          Abstract

          Arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi (AMF) are crucial to plants and vice versa, but little is known about the factors linking the community structure of the two groups. We investigated the association between AMF and the plant community structure in the nearest neighborhood of Festuca brevipila in a semiarid grassland with steep environmental gradients, using high-throughput sequencing of the Glomeromycotina (former Glomeromycota). We focused on the Passenger, Driver and Habitat hypotheses: (i) plant communities drive AMF (passenger); (ii) AMF communities drive the plants (driver); (iii) the environment shapes both communities causing covariation. The null hypothesis is that the two assemblages are independent and this study offers a spatially explicit novel test of it in the field at multiple, small scales. The AMF community consisted of 71 operational taxonomic units, the plant community of 47 species. Spatial distance and spatial variation in the environment were the main determinants of the AMF community. The structure of the plant community around the focal plant was a poor predictor of AMF communities, also in terms of phylogenetic community structure. Some evidence supports the passenger hypothesis, but the relative roles of the factors structuring the two groups clearly differed, leading to an apparent decoupling of the two assemblages at the relatively small scale of this study. Community phylogenetic structure in AMF suggests an important role of within-assemblage interactions.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          ISME J
          ISME J
          The ISME Journal
          Nature Publishing Group
          1751-7362
          1751-7370
          June 2017
          28 February 2017
          : 11
          : 6
          : 1400-1411
          Affiliations
          [1 ] Hawkesbury Institute for the Environment, Western Sydney University , Penrith, NSW, Australia
          [2 ] Berlin-Brandenburg Institute of Advanced Biodiversity Research (BBIB) , Berlin, Germany
          [3 ] Institut für Biologie—Ökologie der Pflanzen, Freie Universität Berlin , Berlin, Germany
          [4 ] Department of Biology, Research group of Plant and Vegetation Ecology (PLECO), University of Antwerp , Wilrijk, Belgium
          [5 ] School of Biological Sciences and Institute for Global Food Security, Queen's University Belfast, Medical Biology Centre , Belfast, Northern Ireland, UK
          Author notes
          [* ] School of Biological Sciences and Institute for Global Food Security, Queen's University Belfast, Medical Biology Centre , 97 Lisburn Road, Belfast BT9 7BL, Northern Ireland, UK. E-mail: t.caruso@ 123456qub.ac.uk
          Article
          PMC5437357 PMC5437357 5437357 ismej20175
          10.1038/ismej.2017.5
          5437357
          28244977
          b3a4c2b1-8e27-4b63-b578-b988c5cbc4d8
          Copyright © 2017 International Society for Microbial Ecology
          History
          : 25 November 2015
          : 14 December 2016
          : 19 December 2016
          Categories
          Original Article

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