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    Host availability drives distributions of fungal endophytes in the imperilled boreal realm

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    Author
    U'Ren, Jana M
    Lutzoni, François
    Miadlikowska, Jolanta
    Zimmerman, Naupaka B
    Carbone, Ignazio
    May, Georgiana
    Arnold, A Elizabeth
    Affiliation
    Univ Arizona, Dept Biosyst Engn
    Univ Arizona, Inst BIO5
    Univ Arizona, Sch Plant Sci
    Univ Arizona, Dept Ecol & Evolutionary Biol
    Issue Date
    2019-10-01
    
    Metadata
    Show full item record
    Publisher
    NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
    Citation
    U’Ren, J. M., Lutzoni, F., Miadlikowska, J., Zimmerman, N. B., Carbone, I., May, G., & Arnold, A. E. (2019). Host availability drives distributions of fungal endophytes in the imperilled boreal realm. Nature ecology & evolution, 1-8.
    Journal
    NATURE ECOLOGY & EVOLUTION
    Rights
    © The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer Nature Limited 2019.
    Collection Information
    This item from the UA Faculty Publications collection is made available by the University of Arizona with support from the University of Arizona Libraries. If you have questions, please contact us at repository@u.library.arizona.edu.
    Abstract
    Boreal forests represent the world's largest terrestrial biome and provide ecosystem services of global importance. Highly imperilled by climate change, these forests host Earth's greatest phylogenetic diversity of endophytes, a hyperdiverse group of symbionts that are defined by their occurrence within living, symptomless plant and lichen tissues. Endophytes shape the ecological and evolutionary trajectories of plants and are therefore key to the function and resilience of terrestrial ecosystems. A critical step in linking the ecological functions of endophytes with those of their hosts is to understand the distributions of these symbionts at the global scale; however, turnover in host taxa with geography and climate can confound insights into endophyte biogeography. As a result, global drivers of endophyte diversity and distributions are not known. Here, we leverage sampling from phylogenetically diverse boreal plants and lichens across North America and Eurasia to show that host filtering in distinctive environments, rather than turnover with geographical or environmental distance, is the main determinant of the community composition and diversity of endophytes. We reveal the distinctiveness of boreal endophytes relative to soil fungi worldwide and endophytes from diverse temperate biomes, highlighting a high degree of global endemism. Overall, the distributions of endophytes are directly linked to the availability of compatible hosts, highlighting the role of biotic interactions in shaping fungal communities across large spatial scales, and the threat that climate change poses to biological diversity and function in the imperilled boreal realm.
    Note
    6 month embargo; published online: 23 September 2019
    ISSN
    2397-334X
    PubMed ID
    31548643
    DOI
    10.1038/s41559-019-0975-2
    Version
    Final accepted manuscript
    Sponsors
    US National Science Foundation (NSF) Dimensions of Biodiversity program [DEB-1045766, DEB-1046167, DEB-1045608, DEB-1046065]; Huron Mountain Wildlife Foundation; Gordon and Betty Moore FoundationGordon and Betty Moore Foundation [GBMF 2550.03]; National Institutes of Health (NIH)United States Department of Health & Human ServicesNational Institutes of Health (NIH) - USA [5 R01 GM1264635]; NSFNational Science Foundation (NSF) [DBI-1759844, TG-DEB090011]; NIH (COBRE grant)United States Department of Health & Human ServicesNational Institutes of Health (NIH) - USA [P30GM103324]
    ae974a485f413a2113503eed53cd6c53
    10.1038/s41559-019-0975-2
    Scopus Count
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