• Medientyp: E-Artikel
  • Titel: Native fungal endophytes suppress an exotic dominant and increase plant diversity over small and large spatial scales
  • Beteiligte: Afkhami, Michelle E.; Strauss, Sharon Y.
  • Erschienen: ECOLOGICAL SOCIETY OF AMERICA, 2016
  • Erschienen in: Ecology, 97 (2016) 5, Seite 1159-1169
  • Sprache: Englisch
  • ISSN: 0012-9658; 1939-9170
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  • Beschreibung: Understanding community dynamics and processes, such as the factors that generate and maintain biodiversity, drive succession, and affect invasion susceptibility, is a central goal in ecology and evolution. While most studies of how species interactions affect communities have focused on highly visible macroorganisms, we show that mutualistic microfungal endophytes have community-level effects across their host plant's range and provide the first example of fungal endophytes enhancing plant diversity. A three-year field study in which we experimentally manipulated endophyte abundance in a native Californian grass showed that despite their minute biomass, endophytes dramatically increased plant community diversity (∼110% greater increase with endophytes) by suppressing a dominant invasive grass, Bromus diandrus. This effect was also detectable, but smaller, across five additional common gardens spanning ecologically diverse habitats, different climates, and >400 km of the host grass' range as well as at microspatial scales within gardens. Our study illustrates that mutualistic microbes, while often hidden players, can have unexpectedly large ecological impacts across a wide range of habitats and scales and may be important for promoting diverse communities and ecosystems.