Arbuscular mycorrhizal fungal community assembly in the Brazilian tropical seasonal dry forest

被引:18
作者
Feitosa de Souza, Tancredo Augusto [1 ]
Freitas, Helena [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Coimbra, Ctr Funct Ecol, Dept Life Sci, P-3000456 Coimbra, Portugal
关键词
Glomeromycota; AMF community; AMF diversity; Native plant species; Exotic plant species; Caatinga; SPECIES RICHNESS; SOIL; GLOMALIN; ROOTS; CLASSIFICATION; GLOMEROMYCOTA; PERFORMANCE; DIVERSITY; ABUNDANCE; CAATINGA;
D O I
10.1186/s13717-017-0072-x
中图分类号
Q14 [生态学(生物生态学)];
学科分类号
071012 ; 0713 ;
摘要
Introduction: Here, we compare the arbuscular mycorrhizal fungal (AMF) community composition in soils from the root zone of the exotic invasive species Prosopis juliflora (EXO soils) and soils from the root zone of the native species Mimosa tenuiflora (NAT soils) from five locations in the Brazilian tropical seasonal dry forest, Paraiba, Brazil, using morphological analyses. Results: AMF community composition in EXO and NAT soils were dissimilar. Available phosphorus, diversity index, spore abundance, and species richness were the main factors differing between the EXO and NAT soils. In general, the most dominant order present in the soils were Glomerales (44.8%) and Gigasporales (41.4%). The most abundant AMF genus in all studied soils was Funneliformis. Conclusions: Differences in AMF community composition were associated with (1) differences in the dominant plant species (P. juliflora vs. M. tenuiflora) and (2) changes in soil chemical factors (soil, pH, total organic carbon, total nitrogen, and available P) in EXO soils. These results contribute to a deeper view of the AMF communities in exotic soils and open new perspectives for ecological processes involving AMF species and exotic plant species in the Brazilian tropical seasonal dry forest.
引用
收藏
页数:10
相关论文
共 76 条
[21]  
GERDEMANN J. W., 1963, TRANS BRIT MYCOL SOC, V46, P235
[22]   Glomalin-related soil protein contains non-mycorrhizal-related heat-stable proteins, lipids and humic materials [J].
Gillespie, Adam W. ;
Farrell, Richard E. ;
Walley, Fran L. ;
Ross, Andrew R. S. ;
Leinweber, Peter ;
Eckhardt, Kai-Uwe ;
Regier, Tom Z. ;
Blyth, Robert I. R. .
SOIL BIOLOGY & BIOCHEMISTRY, 2011, 43 (04) :766-777
[23]   Intraornatosporaceae (Gigasporales), a new family with two new genera and two new species [J].
Goto, Bruno T. ;
Silva, Gladstone A. ;
de Assis, Daniele M. A. ;
Silva, Danielle K. A. ;
Souza, Renata G. ;
Ferreira, Araeska C. A. ;
Jobim, Khadija ;
Mello, Catarina M. A. ;
Vieira, Helder E. E. ;
Maia, Leonor C. ;
Oehl, Fritz .
MYCOTAXON, 2012, 119 :117-132
[24]   Plant neighborhood control of arbuscular mycorrhizal community composition [J].
Hausmann, Natasha Teutsch ;
Hawkes, Christine V. .
NEW PHYTOLOGIST, 2009, 183 (04) :1188-1200
[25]   Arbuscular mycorrhizal assemblages in native plant roots change in the presence of invasive exotic grasses [J].
Hawkes, Christine V. ;
Belnap, Jayne ;
D'Antonio, Carla ;
Firestone, Mary K. .
PLANT AND SOIL, 2006, 281 (1-2) :369-380
[26]   Arbuscular mycorrhiza and nitrogen: implications for individual plants through to ecosystems [J].
Hodge, Angela ;
Storer, Kate .
PLANT AND SOIL, 2015, 386 (1-2) :1-19
[27]   Soil and geography are more important determinants of indigenous arbuscular mycorrhizal communities than management practices in Swiss agricultural soils [J].
Jansa, Jan ;
Erb, Angela ;
Oberholzer, Hans-Rudolf ;
Smilauer, Petr ;
Egli, Simon .
MOLECULAR ECOLOGY, 2014, 23 (08) :2118-2135
[28]  
JENKINS W. R., 1964, PLANT DIS REP, V48, P692
[29]   PLANT INVASION WINDOWS - A TIME-BASED CLASSIFICATION OF INVASION POTENTIAL [J].
JOHNSTONE, IM .
BIOLOGICAL REVIEWS, 1986, 61 (04) :369-394
[30]   Enhancing soil carbon storage for carbon remediation: potential contributions and constraints by microbes [J].
King, Gary M. .
TRENDS IN MICROBIOLOGY, 2011, 19 (02) :75-84