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Persistence of ecologically similar fungi in a restricted floral niche
Fungi in the genera Knoxdaviesia and Sporothrix dominate fungal communities within Protea flowerheads and seed cones (infructescences). Despite apparently similar ecologies, they show strong host recurrence and often occupy the same individual infructescence. Differences in host chemistry explain th...
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Published in: | Antonie van Leeuwenhoek 2022-06, Vol.115 (6), p.761-771 |
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Main Authors: | , , |
Format: | Article |
Language: | English |
Subjects: | |
Citations: | Items that this one cites Items that cite this one |
Online Access: | Get full text |
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Summary: | Fungi in the genera
Knoxdaviesia
and
Sporothrix
dominate fungal communities within
Protea
flowerheads and seed cones (infructescences). Despite apparently similar ecologies, they show strong host recurrence and often occupy the same individual infructescence. Differences in host chemistry explain their host consistency, but the factors that allow co-occupancy of multiple species within individual infructescences are unknown.
Sporothrix splendens
and
K. proteae
often grow on different senescent tissue types within infructescences of their
P. repens
host, indicating that substrate-related differences aid their co-occupancy.
Sporothrix phasma
and
K. capensis
grow on the same tissues of
P. neriifolia
suggesting neutral competitive abilities. Here we test the hypothesis that differences in host-tissues dictate competitive abilities of these fungi and explain their co-occupancy of this spatially restricted niche. Media were prepared from infructescence bases, bracts, seeds, or pollen presenters of
P. neriifolia
and
P. repens
. As expected,
K. capensis
was unable to grow on seeds whilst
S. phasma
could. As hypothesised,
K. capensis
and
S. phasma
had equal competitive abilities on pollen presenters, appearing to explain their co-occupancy of this resource. Growth of
K. proteae
was significantly enhanced on pollen presenters while that of
S. splendens
was the same as the control.
Knoxdavesia proteae
grew significantly faster than
S. splendens
on all tissue types. Despite this,
S. splendens
was a superior competitor on all tissue types. For
K. proteae
to co-occupy infructescences with
S. splendens
for extended periods
,
it likely needs to colonize pollen presenters before the arrival of
S. splendens
. |
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ISSN: | 0003-6072 1572-9699 |
DOI: | 10.1007/s10482-022-01732-w |