European mushroom assemblages are phylogenetically structured by temperature

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  • Claus Bässler
  • Heilmann-Clausen, Jacob
  • Carrie Andrew
  • Lynne Boddy
  • Ulf Büntgen
  • Jeffrey Diez
  • Einar Heegaard
  • Simon Egli
  • Alan C. Gange
  • Rune Halvorsen
  • Håvard Kauserud
  • Paul M. Kirk
  • Irmgard Krisai-Greilhuber
  • Thomas W. Kuyper
  • Jenni Nordén
  • Beatrice Senn-Irlet
  • Franz-Sebastian Krah

Recent global warming affects species compositions at an unprecedented rate. To predict climate-induced changes in species assemblages, a better understanding of the link between species occurrence and climate is needed. Macrofungal fruit body assemblages are correlated with the thermal environment at the European scale. However, it is still unknown whether macrofungal communities are also phylogenetically structured by thermal environments. Thermal environments are characterized by annual temperature means but also by intra-annual temperature variability (hereafter termed temperature seasonality), which are both considered in this study. Here, we used distribution data of 2882 species based on fruit body records across Europe to address two main questions: 1) are mushroom assemblages at the extremes of the mean (warm and cold) and seasonal (high intra-annual variability, i.e. continental) climate gradient phylogenetically more similar than expected (phylogenetic alpha diversity); 2) are mushroom assemblages, that are subject to different mean and seasonal temperature conditions, composed of different lineages (phylogenetic beta diversity). Our phylogenetic alpha diversity analysis shows that mushroom assemblages are phylogenetically structured by warm and cold environments, indicating that phylogenetically related species with similar traits thrive under more extreme conditions. In contrast, assemblages are phylogenetically more dissimilar (overdispersed) in temperature seasonal environments, indicating limiting similarity. Phylogenetic beta diversity was significantly correlated with mean and seasonal temperature differences, a response mainly driven by a few genera. Our results show that macrofungal assemblages are phylogenetically structured by temperature across Europe, suggesting phylogenetically constrained specialization towards temperature extremes. Predicted anthropogenic warming is likely to affect species composition and phylogenetic diversity with additional consequences for the carbon- and nutrient cycles.

OriginalsprogEngelsk
Artikelnummere06206
TidsskriftEcography
Vol/bind2022
Udgave nummer11
Antal sider12
ISSN0906-7590
DOI
StatusUdgivet - 2022

Bibliografisk note

Funding Information:
– We thank the Research Council of Norway for financial support (ES500181) and Dr Dag Endresen for dataset processing assistance. For providing digitized data: AT, The Austrian Mycological Society and Wolfgang Dämon; CH, and Peter Jakob; DE, Deutsche Gesellschaft für Mykologie (German Mycological Society) and Dr Martin Schmidt; DK, The Danish Fungal Atlas team and Tobias Frøslev, Thomas Læssøe, Jens. H. Petersen and Jan Vesterholt; EE, Estonian eBiodiversity database, Dr Kadri Pärtel, and Kessy Abarenkov; NL, the Netherlands Mycological Society (NMV) and A. van den Berg; NO, The Mycological Herbarium at the Natural History Museum (Univ. of Oslo); SI, The Slovenian Forestry Insti., the Central database of fungi in Slovenia, the Slovenian Mycological Association, and Dr Nikica Ogris; UK, . Finally, we are deeply indebted to the thousands of fungal recorders across the nations. Without their contributions, this research would not have been possible.

Publisher Copyright:
© 2022 The Authors. Ecography published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd on behalf of Nordic Society Oikos.

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