Fungal Diversity in the Phyllosphere of <i>Pinus heldreichii</i> H. Christ—An Endemic and High-Altitude Pine of the Mediterranean Region

<i>Pinus heldreichii</i> is a high-altitude coniferous tree species naturaly occurring in small and disjuncted populations in the Balkans and southern Italy. The aim of this study was to assess diversity and composition of fungal communities in living needles of <i>P. heldreichii&l...

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Main Authors: Jelena Lazarević, Audrius Menkis
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2020-04-01
Series:Diversity
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/1424-2818/12/5/172
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spelling doaj-02bebc98ce88417196b3b168fc55e46b2020-11-25T02:41:31ZengMDPI AGDiversity1424-28182020-04-011217217210.3390/d12050172Fungal Diversity in the Phyllosphere of <i>Pinus heldreichii</i> H. Christ—An Endemic and High-Altitude Pine of the Mediterranean RegionJelena Lazarević0Audrius Menkis1Biotechnical faculty, University of Montenegro, Mihaila Lalića 15, 81 000 Podgorica, MontenegroDepartment of Forest Mycology and Plant Pathology, Uppsala BioCenter, Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences, P.O. Box 7026, SE-75007 Uppsala, Sweden<i>Pinus heldreichii</i> is a high-altitude coniferous tree species naturaly occurring in small and disjuncted populations in the Balkans and southern Italy. The aim of this study was to assess diversity and composition of fungal communities in living needles of <i>P. heldreichii</i> specifically focusing on fungal pathogens. Sampling was carried out at six different sites in Montenegro, where 2-4 year-old living needles of <i>P. heldreichii</i> were collected. Following DNA isolation, it was amplified using ITS2 rDNA as a marker and subjected to high-throughput sequencing. Sequencing resulted in 31,831 high quality reads, which after assembly were found to represent 375 fungal taxa. The detected fungi were 295 (78.7%) Ascomycota, 79 (21.0%) Basidiomycota and 1 (0.2%) Mortierellomycotina. The most common fungi were <i>Lophodermium pinastri</i> (12.5% of all high-quality sequences), <i>L. conigenum</i> (10.9%), <i>Sydowia</i> <i>polyspora</i> (8.8%), <i>Cyclaneusma niveum</i> (5.5%), Unidentified sp. 2814_1 (5.4%) and <i>Phaeosphaeria punctiformis</i> (4.4%). The community composition varied among different sites, but in this respect two sites at higher altitudes (harsh growing conditions) were separated from three sites at lower altitudes (milder growing conditions), suggesting that environmental conditions were among major determinants of fungal communities associated with needles of <i>P. heldreichii</i>. Trees on one study site were attacked by bark beetles, leading to discolouration and frequent dieback of needles, thereby strongly affecting the fungal community structure. Among all functional groups of fungi, pathogens appeared to be an important component of fungal communities in the phyllosphere of <i>P. heldreichii</i>, especially in those trees under strong abiotic and biotic stress.https://www.mdpi.com/1424-2818/12/5/172needle pathogenshigh altitude forestsDNA metabarcodingMontenegro
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Jelena Lazarević
Audrius Menkis
spellingShingle Jelena Lazarević
Audrius Menkis
Fungal Diversity in the Phyllosphere of <i>Pinus heldreichii</i> H. Christ—An Endemic and High-Altitude Pine of the Mediterranean Region
Diversity
needle pathogens
high altitude forests
DNA metabarcoding
Montenegro
author_facet Jelena Lazarević
Audrius Menkis
author_sort Jelena Lazarević
title Fungal Diversity in the Phyllosphere of <i>Pinus heldreichii</i> H. Christ—An Endemic and High-Altitude Pine of the Mediterranean Region
title_short Fungal Diversity in the Phyllosphere of <i>Pinus heldreichii</i> H. Christ—An Endemic and High-Altitude Pine of the Mediterranean Region
title_full Fungal Diversity in the Phyllosphere of <i>Pinus heldreichii</i> H. Christ—An Endemic and High-Altitude Pine of the Mediterranean Region
title_fullStr Fungal Diversity in the Phyllosphere of <i>Pinus heldreichii</i> H. Christ—An Endemic and High-Altitude Pine of the Mediterranean Region
title_full_unstemmed Fungal Diversity in the Phyllosphere of <i>Pinus heldreichii</i> H. Christ—An Endemic and High-Altitude Pine of the Mediterranean Region
title_sort fungal diversity in the phyllosphere of <i>pinus heldreichii</i> h. christ—an endemic and high-altitude pine of the mediterranean region
publisher MDPI AG
series Diversity
issn 1424-2818
publishDate 2020-04-01
description <i>Pinus heldreichii</i> is a high-altitude coniferous tree species naturaly occurring in small and disjuncted populations in the Balkans and southern Italy. The aim of this study was to assess diversity and composition of fungal communities in living needles of <i>P. heldreichii</i> specifically focusing on fungal pathogens. Sampling was carried out at six different sites in Montenegro, where 2-4 year-old living needles of <i>P. heldreichii</i> were collected. Following DNA isolation, it was amplified using ITS2 rDNA as a marker and subjected to high-throughput sequencing. Sequencing resulted in 31,831 high quality reads, which after assembly were found to represent 375 fungal taxa. The detected fungi were 295 (78.7%) Ascomycota, 79 (21.0%) Basidiomycota and 1 (0.2%) Mortierellomycotina. The most common fungi were <i>Lophodermium pinastri</i> (12.5% of all high-quality sequences), <i>L. conigenum</i> (10.9%), <i>Sydowia</i> <i>polyspora</i> (8.8%), <i>Cyclaneusma niveum</i> (5.5%), Unidentified sp. 2814_1 (5.4%) and <i>Phaeosphaeria punctiformis</i> (4.4%). The community composition varied among different sites, but in this respect two sites at higher altitudes (harsh growing conditions) were separated from three sites at lower altitudes (milder growing conditions), suggesting that environmental conditions were among major determinants of fungal communities associated with needles of <i>P. heldreichii</i>. Trees on one study site were attacked by bark beetles, leading to discolouration and frequent dieback of needles, thereby strongly affecting the fungal community structure. Among all functional groups of fungi, pathogens appeared to be an important component of fungal communities in the phyllosphere of <i>P. heldreichii</i>, especially in those trees under strong abiotic and biotic stress.
topic needle pathogens
high altitude forests
DNA metabarcoding
Montenegro
url https://www.mdpi.com/1424-2818/12/5/172
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