Management regime is the most important factor influencing ectomycorrhizal species community in Norway spruce forests after windthrow

Ectomycorrhizal (ECM) fungi, as symbionts of many tree species in temperate forests, are thought to play an important role in forest regeneration processes after large disturbances. Their reaction to different disturbance and management regimes was studied in spruce forests ( Lariceto-Piceetum ) 10 ...

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Veröffentlicht in:Mycorrhiza 2018-04, Vol.28 (3), p.221-233
Hauptverfasser: Vašutová, Martina, Edwards-Jonášová, Magda, Veselá, Petra, Effenberková, Lenka, Fleischer, Peter, Cudlín, Pavel
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container_end_page 233
container_issue 3
container_start_page 221
container_title Mycorrhiza
container_volume 28
creator Vašutová, Martina
Edwards-Jonášová, Magda
Veselá, Petra
Effenberková, Lenka
Fleischer, Peter
Cudlín, Pavel
description Ectomycorrhizal (ECM) fungi, as symbionts of many tree species in temperate forests, are thought to play an important role in forest regeneration processes after large disturbances. Their reaction to different disturbance and management regimes was studied in spruce forests ( Lariceto-Piceetum ) 10 years after a severe windthrow in the Tatra National Park (Slovak Republic). ECM community structure was compared between different “management types″—cleared area (EXT), area affected by wildfire (FIRE), uncleared area left for natural development (NEX), and mature forest as a control (REF). Based on Illumina sequencing of soil samples, we determined that the percentage of sequences assigned to ECM fungi decreased with increasing disturbance and management intensity (REF → NEX → EXT → FIRE). Similarly, the total number of ECM species per each of ten sampling points per plot (100 ha) differed between managed (EXT-11 species, FIRE-9) and unmanaged (NEX-16, REF-14) treatments. On the other hand, the percentage of sequences belonging to ericoid mycorrhizal fungi increased. Management type significantly influenced the composition of the ECM community, while vegetation and soil characteristics explained less data variation. The ECM species assemblage of the unmanaged site (NEX) was the most similar to the mature forest, while that of the burnt site was the most different. Thelephora terrestris dominated in all treatments affected by windthrow, accompanied by Tylospora fibrillosa (NEX) and Tylospora asterophora (EXT and FIRE). Management regime was also the most important factor affecting ECM species composition on the roots of spruce seedlings assessed by Sanger sequencing.
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subjects Agriculture
Biomedical and Life Sciences
Communities
Community structure
Coniferous forests
Ecology
Ectomycorrhizas
Forest management
Forestry
Forests
Fungi
Life Sciences
Microbiology
National parks
Original Article
Pine trees
Plant Sciences
Plant species
Regeneration
Seedlings
Soil characteristics
Species composition
Symbionts
Temperate forests
Wildfires
Windthrow
title Management regime is the most important factor influencing ectomycorrhizal species community in Norway spruce forests after windthrow
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