DIVERSITY, HOST AFFINITY, AND DISTRIBUTION OF SEED-INFECTING FUNGI: A CASE STUDY WITHCECROPIA
- 1 March 2007
- Vol. 88 (3) , 582-588
- https://doi.org/10.1890/05-1207
Abstract
Recruitment limitation has been proposed as an important mechanism contributing to the maintenance of tropical tree diversity. For pioneer species, infection by fungi significantly reduces seed survival in soil, potentially influencing both recruitment success and adult distributions. We examined fresh seeds of four sympatric Cecropia species for evidence of fungal infection, buried seeds for five months in common gardens below four C. insignis crowns in central Panama, and measured seed survival and fungal infection of inviable seeds. Seed survival varied significantly among species and burial sites, and with regard to local (Panama) vs. foreign (Costa Rica) maternal seed sources. Fresh seeds contained few cultivable fungi, but >80% of soil‐incubated seeds were infected by diverse Ascomycota, including putative pathogens, saprophytes, and endophytes. From 220 isolates sequenced for the nuclear internal transcribed spacer region (ITS), 26 of 73 unique genotypes were encountered more than once. Based on the most common genotypes, fungal communities demonstrate host affinity and are structured at the scale of individual crowns. Similarity among fungal communities beneath a given crown was significantly greater than similarity among isolates found under different crowns. However, the frequency of rare species suggests high fungal diversity and fine‐scale spatial heterogeneity. These results reveal complex plant–fungal interactions in soil and provide a first indication of how seed survival in tropical forests may be affected by fungal community composition.Keywords
This publication has 28 references indexed in Scilit:
- The influence of seed source, habitat and fungi on Cecropia seed survival in two neotropical forests.Published by CABI Publishing ,2007
- Endophytic Fungal Mutualists: Seed-Borne Stagonospora Spp. Enhance Reed Biomass Production in Axenic MicrocosmsMolecular Plant-Microbe Interactions®, 2003
- Cecropia as a food resource for bats in French Guiana and the significance of fruit structure in seed dispersal and longevityAmerican Journal of Botany, 2003
- Urticalean rosids: circumscription, rosid ancestry, and phylogenetics based on rbcL, trnL‐F, and ndhF sequencesAmerican Journal of Botany, 2002
- Contributions of seed dispersal and demography to recruitment limitation in a Costa Rican cloud forest.Published by CABI Publishing ,2002
- Diversity and Variability in Soil Fungi from a Disturbed Tropical Rain ForestMycologia, 1998
- The consequences of recruitment limitation: reconciling chance, history and competitive differences between plantsJournal of Theoretical Biology, 1995
- Predation by Rodents and Bruchid Beetles on Seeds of Scheelea Palms on Barro Colorado Island, PanamaBiotropica, 1994
- Seedling Survival of Tropical Tree Species: Interactions of Dispersal Distance, Light‐Gaps, and PathogensEcology, 1984
- Influence of Certain Fungi on Seed Germination and Seedling Survival of Four Colonizing AnnualsJournal of Applied Ecology, 1979