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1.
Environ Manage ; 73(4): 777-787, 2024 Apr.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38097676

RESUMO

Understanding the regeneration and succession of belowground communities, particularly in forests, is vital for maintaining ecosystem health. Despite its importance, there is limited knowledge regarding how fungal communities change over time during ecosystem development, especially under different forest restoration strategies. In this study, we focused on two restoration methods used in northern Japan: monoculture planting and natural regeneration. We examined the responses of the fungal community to monoculture plantations (active tree planting) and naturally regenerated (passive regeneration) forests over a 50-year chronosequence, using natural forests as a reference. Based on DNA metabarcoding, we assessed the richness of fungal Operational Taxonomic Units (OTUs) and their dissimilarity. Our findings revealed that soil fungal richness remained stable after natural regeneration but declined in monoculture plantations, from 354 to 247 OTUs. While the compositional dissimilarity of fungal assemblages between monoculture plantations and natural forests remained consistent regardless of the time since tree planting, it significantly decreased after natural regeneration, suggesting recovery to a state close to the reference level. Notably, the composition of key functional fungal groups-saprotrophic and ectomycorrhizal- has increasingly mirrored that of natural forests over time following passive natural regeneration. In summary, our study suggests that monoculture plantations may not be effective for long-term ecosystem function and service recovery because of their limited support for soil fungal diversity. These results underscore the importance of natural regeneration in forest restoration and management strategies.


Assuntos
Ecossistema , Micobioma , Solo , Florestas , Plantas/microbiologia , Árvores , Microbiologia do Solo
2.
FEMS Microbiol Ecol ; 99(9)2023 08 22.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37533207

RESUMO

Primary succession and microtopography result in environmental changes and are important processes influencing the community assembly of soil fungi in the Arctic region. In glacier forefields that contain a series of moraine ridges, both processes contribute synchronously to fungal spatial diversity. To reveal the synergistic effects of succession and microtopography, we investigated the fungal community structure and environmental variables in the moraines of the Arklio Glacier, Ellesmere Island. The study sites were established at four locations from the top to the bottom of the ridge slope within each of the three moraine ridges of different post-glacial ages. The location-dependent community composition was equally diverse in both the initial and later stages of succession, suggesting that successional time could alter the effects of microtopography on the fungal community. Moreover, our results suggest that fungal communities at different locations follow different successional trajectories, even if they have passed through the same time lapse. Such a synergistic effect of succession and microtopography of moraines does not allow for parallel changes in fungal communities among moraines or among locations, suggesting that the moraine series contributes substantially to fungal spatial diversity in the glacier forefield.


Assuntos
Camada de Gelo , Solo , Camada de Gelo/microbiologia , Solo/química , Regiões Árticas , Microbiologia do Solo
3.
FEMS Microbiol Ecol ; 99(2)2023 01 24.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36581318

RESUMO

Beta-diversity partitioning has shown that the nestedness component is developed with environmental stress in a variety of taxa. However, soil fungal community may maintain its turnover components in contrast to the development of plants' nestedness component, and the potential causes remain unclear. To investigate the process of species turnover of soil fungi along a stress gradient in the Arctic, we divided species turnover component into sub-components: ßsim_hete and ßsim_homo representing species turnover with and without a change in the guilds, respectively. The results indicate that fungal communities maintain their turnover components, unlike plant communities; however, their ßsim_hete increased under stressful conditions. Additionally, GDM analysis showed that ßsim_hete was mainly explained by stress gradient and plant nestedness, suggesting that the functionality of soil fungi was ecologically filtered by environmental stress and plant community structure. The discordant trend of beta-diversity values between plant and fungi (i.e. development of plant nestedness and maintenance of fungal turnover) is possibly not caused by different assembly rules working in parallel on the two taxa, but according to an ecological rule that reflects plant-fungal interaction.


Assuntos
Biodiversidade , Plantas , Fungos/genética , Solo/química , Microbiologia do Solo
4.
Ecol Lett ; 25(7): 1711-1724, 2022 Jul.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35616424

RESUMO

Beta(ß)-diversity, or site-to-site variation in species composition, generally decreases with increasing latitude, and the underlying processes driving this pattern have been challenging to elucidate because the signals of community assembly processes are scale-dependent. In this meta-analysis, by synthesising the results of 103 studies that were distributed globally and conducted at various spatial scales, we revealed a latitudinal gradient in the detectable assembly processes of vascular plant communities. Variations in plant community composition at low and high latitudes were mainly explained by geographic variables, suggesting that distance decay and dispersal limitations causing spatial aggregation are influential in these regions. In contrast, variation in species composition correlated most strongly with environmental variables at mid-latitudes (20-30°), reflecting the importance of environmental filtering, although this unimodal pattern was not statistically significant. Importantly, our analysis revealed the effects of different spatial scales, such that the correlation with spatial variables was stronger at smaller sampling extents, and environmental variables were more influential at larger sampling extents. We concluded that plant communities are driven by different community assembly processes in distinct biogeographical regions, suggesting that the latitudinal gradient of biodiversity is created by a combination of multiple processes that vary with environmental and species size differences.


Assuntos
Biodiversidade , Plantas
5.
FEMS Microbiol Ecol ; 97(10)2021 10 01.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34494103

RESUMO

Metabarcoding technologies for soil fungal DNA pools have enabled to capture the diversity of fungal community and the agreement of their ß-diversity with plant ß-diversity. However, processes underlying the synchrony of the aboveground-belowground biodiversity is still unclear. By using partitioning methods for plant ß-diversity, this study explored the process driving synchrony in tundra ecosystems, in which drastic vegetation shifts are observed with climate warming. Our methods based on Baselga's partitioning enabled the division of plant ß-diversity into two phenomena and three functional components. Correlation of fungal ß-diversity with the components of plant ß-diversity showed that the spatial replacement of fungi was promoted by plant species turnover, in particular, plant species turnover with functional exchange. In addition, spatial variety of graminoid or forbs species, rather than shrubs, enhanced fungal ß-diversity. These results suggest the importance of small-scale factors such as plant-fungal interactions or local environments modified by plants for the fungal community assemblage. The process-based understanding of community dynamics of plants and fungi allows us to predict the ongoing shrub encroachment in the Arctic region, which could weaken the aboveground-belowground synchrony.


Assuntos
Ecossistema , Solo , Regiões Árticas , Biodiversidade , Fungos/genética , Tundra
6.
Oecologia ; 184(3): 685-699, 2017 07.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28669001

RESUMO

Evidence of the indirect effects of increasing global deer populations on other trophic levels is increasing. However, it remains unknown if excluding deer alters ecosystem functional relationships. We investigated how sika deer exclosure after 18 years changed soil conditions, the understory plant community, the traits of a dominant understory plant (Sasa palmata), herbivory by three insect-feeding guilds, and the functional relationships between these properties. Deer absence decreased understory plant diversity, but increased soil organic matter and ammonium concentrations. When deer were absent, S. palmata plants grew taller, with more, larger, and tougher leaves with higher polyphenol concentrations. Deer absence led to higher leaf area consumed by all insect guilds, but lower insect herbivory per plant due to increased resource abundance (i.e., a dilution effect). This indicates that deer presence strengthened insect herbivory per plant, while in deer absence plants compensated losses with growth. Because plant defenses increased in the absence of deer, higher insect abundances in deer absence may have outweighed lower consumption rates. A path model revealed that the functional relationships between the measured properties were similar between deer absence versus presence. Taken together, deer altered the abiotic and biotic environment, thereby changing insect herbivory, which might impact upon nutrient cycling and primary productivity. These results provide evidence that deer can alter interactions between trophic levels, but that functional relationships between certain ecosystem components may remain constant. These findings highlight the need to consider how increasing global deer populations can have cascade effects that might alter ecosystem dynamics.


Assuntos
Cervos , Herbivoria , Insetos , Animais , Plantas , Dinâmica Populacional , Solo
7.
ACS Macro Lett ; 4(6): 628-631, 2015 Jun 16.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35596405

RESUMO

In this report, we demonstrate the use of a thermoresponsive ligand for the ruthenium-catalyzed living radical polymerization of butyl methacrylate (BMA) in miniemulsion. A phosphine-ligand-functionalized polyethylene glycol chain (PPEG) in conjunction with a Cp*-based ruthenium complex (Cp*: pentamethylcyclopentadienyl) provided thermoresponsive character as well as catalysis for living polymerization: the complex migrated from the water phase to the oil phase for polymerization upon heating and then migrated from the oil to water phase when the temperature was decreased to quench polymerization. Consequently, simple treatment (i.e., water washing or methanol reprecipitation) yielded metal-free polymeric particles containing less than 10 µg/g (by ICP-AES) of ruthenium residue.

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