Arbuscular mycorrhizal fungal communities along a pedo-hydrological gradient in a Central Amazonian terra firme forest

Spores 0106 biological sciences Rainforest Physiology Soil Moisture Acaulospora Hydrogen-ion Concentration Microbiology 01 natural sciences Host Specificity Fungus Spore Trees Soil Abundance Amazonia Mycorrhizae Community Composition Bacteria (microorganisms) Soil Microbiology Ph Brasil Fungi Spore Arbuscular Mycorrhiza Plant Biodiversity Arbuscular Hydrogen-Ion Concentration Spores, Fungal 15. Life on land Classification Soil Texture Glomus Relative Abundance Chemistry Fungal Mycorrhiza Cytology Tree Brazil
DOI: 10.1007/s00572-013-0507-x Publication Date: 2013-06-10T02:21:36Z
ABSTRACT
Little attention has been paid to plant mutualistic interactions in the Amazon rainforest, and the general pattern of occurrence and diversity of arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi (AMF) in these ecosystems is largely unknown. This study investigated AMF communities through their spores in soil in a 'terra firme forest' in Central Amazonia. The contribution played by abiotic factors and plant host species identity in regulating the composition, abundance and diversity of such communities along a topographic gradient with different soils and hydrology was also evaluated. Forty-one spore morphotypes were observed with species belonging to the genera Glomus and Acaulospora, representing 44 % of the total taxa. Soil texture and moisture, together with host identity, were predominant factors responsible for shaping AMF communities along the pedo-hydrological gradient. However, the variability within AMF communities was largely associated with shifts in the relative abundance of spores rather than changes in species composition, confirming that common AMF species are widely distributed in plant communities and all plants recruited into the forest are likely to be exposed to the dominant sporulating AMF species.
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