Arthropod communities in fungal fruitbodies are weakly structured by climate and biogeography across European beech forests

Friess, Nicolas; Müller, Jörg C.; Aramendi, Pablo; Bässler, Claus; Brändle, Martin; Bouget, Christophe; Brin, Antoine; Bussler, Heinz; Georgiev, Kostadin B.; Gil, Radosław; Gossner, Martin M.; Heilmann‐Clausen, Jacob; Isacsson, Gunnar; Krištín, Anton; Lachat, Thibault; Larrieu, Laurent; Magnanou, Elodie; Maringer, Alexander; Mergner, Ulrich; Mikoláš, Martin; ... (2019). Arthropod communities in fungal fruitbodies are weakly structured by climate and biogeography across European beech forests Diversity and Distributions, 25(5), pp. 783-796. Wiley-Blackwell 10.1111/ddi.12882

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Aim The tinder fungus Fomes fomentarius is a pivotal wood decomposer in European beech Fagus sylvatica forests. The fungus, however, has regionally declined due to centuries of logging. To unravel biogeographical drivers of arthropod communities associated with this fungus, we investigated how space, climate and habitat amount structure alpha and beta diversity of arthropod communities in fruitbodies of F. fomentarius. Location Temperate zone of Europe. Taxon Arthropods. Methods We reared arthropods from fruitbodies sampled from 61 sites throughout the range of European beech and identified 13 orders taxonomically or by metabarcoding. We estimated the total number of species occurring in fruitbodies of F. fomentarius in European beech forests using the Chao2 estimator and determined the relative importance of space, climate and habitat amount by hierarchical partitioning for alpha diversity and generalized dissimilarity models for beta diversity. A subset of fungi samples was sequenced for identification of the fungus’ genetic structure. Results The total number of arthropod species occurring in fruitbodies of F. fomentarius across European beech forests was estimated to be 600. Alpha diversity increased with increasing fruitbody biomass; it decreased with increasing longitude, temperature and latitude. Beta diversity was mainly composed by turnover. Patterns of beta diversity were only weakly linked to space and the overall explanatory power was low. We could distinguish two genotypes of F. fomentarius, which showed no spatial structuring. Main conclusion Fomes fomentarius hosts a large number of arthropods in European beech forests. The low biogeographical and climatic structure of the communities suggests that fruitbodies represent a habitat that offers similar conditions across large gradients of climate and space, but are characterized by high local variability in community composition and colonized by species with high dispersal ability. For European beech forests, retention of trees with F. fomentarius and promoting its recolonization where it had declined seems a promising conservation strategy.

Item Type:

Journal Article (Original Article)

Division/Institute:

School of Agricultural, Forest and Food Sciences HAFL > Multifunctional Forest Management

Name:

Friess, Nicolas;
Müller, Jörg C.;
Aramendi, Pablo;
Bässler, Claus;
Brändle, Martin;
Bouget, Christophe;
Brin, Antoine;
Bussler, Heinz;
Georgiev, Kostadin B.;
Gil, Radosław;
Gossner, Martin M.;
Heilmann‐Clausen, Jacob;
Isacsson, Gunnar;
Krištín, Anton;
Lachat, Thibault0000-0003-3952-7443;
Larrieu, Laurent;
Magnanou, Elodie;
Maringer, Alexander;
Mergner, Ulrich;
Mikoláš, Martin;
Opgenoorth, Lars;
Schmidl, Jürgen;
Svoboda, Miroslav;
Thorn, Simon;
Vandekerkhove, Kris;
Vrezec, Al;
Wagner, Thomas;
Winter, Maria‐Barbara;
Zapponi, Livia;
Brandl, Roland;
Seibold, Sebastian and
Traveset, Anna

Subjects:

G Geography. Anthropology. Recreation > GE Environmental Sciences
Q Science > QK Botany
Q Science > QL Zoology
S Agriculture > SD Forestry

ISSN:

1366-9516

Publisher:

Wiley-Blackwell

Language:

English

Submitter:

Nadine Werndli

Date Deposited:

30 Oct 2019 11:22

Last Modified:

18 Dec 2020 13:29

Publisher DOI:

10.1111/ddi.12882

ARBOR DOI:

10.24451/arbor.8741

URI:

https://arbor.bfh.ch/id/eprint/8741

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