Intensive tropical land use massively shifts soil fungal communities

2019 | journal article; research paper. A publication with affiliation to the University of Göttingen.

Jump to: Cite & Linked | Documents & Media | Details | Version history

Cite this publication

​Intensive tropical land use massively shifts soil fungal communities​
Brinkmann, N.; Schneider, D.; Sahner, J.; Ballauff, J.; Edy, N.; Barus, H. & Irawan, B. et al.​ (2019) 
Scientific Reports9(1) pp. 3403​-3403​.​ DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-019-39829-4 

Documents & Media

s41598-019-39829-4.pdf2.35 MBAdobe PDF

License

Published Version

Attribution 4.0 CC BY 4.0

Details

Authors
Brinkmann, Nicole; Schneider, Dominik; Sahner, Josephine; Ballauff, Johannes; Edy, Nur; Barus, Henry; Irawan, Bambang; Budi, Sri Wilarso; Qaim, Matin ; Daniel, Rolf; Polle, Andrea
Abstract
Soil fungi are key players in nutrient cycles as decomposers, mutualists and pathogens, but the impact of tropical rain forest transformation into rubber or oil palm plantations on fungal community structures and their ecological functions are unknown. We hypothesized that increasing land use intensity and habitat loss due to the replacement of the hyperdiverse forest flora by nonendemic cash crops drives a drastic loss of diversity of soil fungal taxa and impairs the ecological soil functions. Unexpectedly, rain forest conversion was not associated with strong diversity loss but with massive shifts in soil fungal community composition. Fungal communities clustered according to land use system and loss of plant species. Network analysis revealed characteristic fungal genera significantly associated with different land use systems. Shifts in soil fungal community structure were particularly distinct among different trophic groups, with substantial decreases in symbiotrophic fungi and increases in saprotrophic and pathotrophic fungi in oil palm and rubber plantations in comparison with rain forests. In conclusion, conversion of rain forests and current land use systems restructure soil fungal communities towards enhanced pathogen pressure and, thus, threaten ecosystem health functions.
Issue Date
2019
Journal
Scientific Reports 
Project
SFB 990: Ökologische und sozioökonomische Funktionen tropischer Tieflandregenwald-Transformationssysteme (Sumatra, Indonesien) 
SFB 990 | B | B02: Impact of rainforest transformation on phylogenetic and functional diversity of soil prokaryotic communities in Sumatra (Indonesia) 
SFB 990 | B | B07: Functional diversity of mycorrhizal fungi along a tropical land-use gradient 
SFB 990 | C | C07: Einflussfaktoren von Landnutzungswandel und sozioökonomische Auswirkungen für ländliche Haushalte 
Organization
Department für Agrarökonomie und Rurale Entwicklung ; Fakultät für Forstwissenschaften und Waldökologie ; Büsgen-Institut ; Abteilung Forstbotanik und Baumphysiologie 
ISSN
2045-2322
Language
English
Subject(s)
sfb990_journalarticles

Reference

Citations


Social Media