Towards establishing a fungal economics spectrum in soil saprobic fungi

  • Tessa Camenzind
  • , Carlos A. Aguilar-Trigueros
  • , Stefan Hempel
  • , Anika Lehmann
  • , Milos Bielcik
  • , Diana R. Andrade-Linares
  • , Joana Bergmann
  • , Jeane dela Cruz
  • , Jessie Gawronski
  • , Polina Golubeva
  • , Heike Haslwimmer
  • , Linda Lartey
  • , Eva Leifheit
  • , Stefanie Maaß
  • , Sven Marhan
  • , Liliana Pinek
  • , Jeff R. Powell
  • , Julien Roy
  • , Stavros D. Veresoglou
  • , Dongwei Wang
  • Anja Wulf, Weishuang Zheng, Matthias C. Rillig

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Trait-based frameworks are promising tools to understand the functional consequences of community shifts in response to environmental change. The applicability of these tools to soil microbes is limited by a lack of functional trait data and a focus on categorical traits. To address this gap for an important group of soil microorganisms, we identify trade-offs underlying a fungal economics spectrum based on a large trait collection in 28 saprobic fungal isolates, derived from a common grassland soil and grown in culture plates. In this dataset, ecologically relevant trait variation is best captured by a three-dimensional fungal economics space. The primary explanatory axis represents a dense-fast continuum, resembling dominant life-history trade-offs in other taxa. A second significant axis reflects mycelial flexibility, and a third one carbon acquisition traits. All three axes correlate with traits involved in soil carbon cycling. Since stress tolerance and fundamental niche gradients are primarily related to the dense-fast continuum, traits of the 2nd (carbon-use efficiency) and especially the 3rd (decomposition) orthogonal axes are independent of tested environmental stressors. These findings suggest a fungal economics space which can now be tested at broader scales.

Original languageEnglish
Article number3321
JournalNature Communications
Volume15
Issue number1
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Dec 2024
Externally publishedYes

Keywords

  • Soil
  • Mycelium
  • Fungi
  • Carbon
  • Soil Microbiology
  • Ecosystem

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