Diversity and specialization responses to climate and land use differ between deadwood fungi and bacteria

Research output: Contribution to journalResearch articleContributedpeer-review

Contributors

  • Jana Englmeier - , University of Würzburg (Author)
  • Daniel Rieker - , Chair of Forest Zoology, Goethe University Frankfurt a.M. (Author)
  • Oliver Mitesser - , University of Würzburg (Author)
  • Caryl Benjamin - , Technical University of Munich (Author)
  • Ute Fricke - , University of Würzburg, Leibniz University Hannover (LUH) (Author)
  • Cristina Ganuza - , University of Würzburg (Author)
  • Maria Haensel - , University of Bayreuth (Author)
  • Harald Kellner - , Chair of Environmental Biotechnology (Author)
  • Janina Lorz - , University of Würzburg (Author)
  • Sarah Redlich - , University of Würzburg (Author)
  • Rebekka Riebl - , University of Bayreuth (Author)
  • Sandra Rojas-Botero - , Technical University of Munich (Author)
  • Thomas Rummler - , Augsburg University (Author)
  • Ingolf Steffan-Dewenter - , Bavarian Forest National Park (Author)
  • Elisa Stengel - , University of Würzburg (Author)
  • Cynthia Tobisch - , Technical University of Munich, Weihenstephan-Triesdorf University of Applied Sciences (Author)
  • Johannes Uhler - , University of Würzburg, Julius Kuhn-Institut (Author)
  • Lars Uphus - , Technical University of Munich (Author)
  • Jie Zhang - , University of Würzburg (Author)
  • Joerg Mueller - , University of Würzburg, Bavarian Forest National Park (Author)
  • Claus Baessler - , Goethe University Frankfurt a.M., University of Bayreuth, Bavarian Forest National Park (Author)

Abstract

Climate and land use are major determinants of biodiversity, and declines in species richness in cold and human exploited landscapes can be caused by lower rates of biotic interactions. Deadwood fungi and bacteria interact strongly with their hosts due to long-lasting evolutionary trajectories. However, how rates of biotic interactions (specialization) change with temperature and land-use intensity are unknown for both microbial groups. We hypothesize a decrease in species richness and specialization of communities with decreasing temperature and increasing land use intensity while controlling for precipitation. We used a full-factorial nested design to disentangle land use at habitat and landscape scale and temperature spanning an area of 300 x 300 km in Germany. We exposed four deadwood objects representing the main tree species in Central Europe (beech, oak, spruce, pine) in 175 study plots. Overall, we found that fungal and bacterial richness, community composition and specialization were weakly related to temperature and land use. Fungal richness was slightly higher in near-natural than in urban landscapes. Bacterial richness was positively associated with mean annual temperature, negatively associated with local temperature and highest in grassland habitats. Bacterial richness was positively related to the covariate mean annual precipitation. We found strong effects of host-tree identity on species richness and community composition. A generally high level of fungal host-tree specialization might explain the weak response to temperature and land use. Effects of host-tree identity and specialization were more pronounced in fungi. We suggest that host tree changes caused by land use and climate change will be more important for fungal communities, while changes in climate will affect bacterial communities more directly. Contrasting responses of the two taxonomic groups suggest a reorganization of deadwood microbial communities, which might have further consequences on diversity and decomposition in the Anthropocene.

Details

Original languageEnglish
Article numbere06807
Number of pages12
Journal Ecography : pattern and diversity in ecology ; research papers forum / Nordic Ecologic Society Oikos
Volume2023
Issue number11
Early online dateJul 2023
Publication statusPublished - Nov 2023
Peer-reviewedYes

External IDs

Scopus 85165073003
ORCID /0000-0002-9082-3910/work/153654914

Keywords

Keywords

  • Climate change, Land-use intensification, Microbes, Network analysis, Saproxylic, Urbanization