Seasonal consumption of mycorrhizal fungi by a marsupial-dominated mammal community

IF 1.9 3区 环境科学与生态学 Q3 ECOLOGY Fungal Ecology Pub Date : 2023-08-01 DOI:10.1016/j.funeco.2023.101247
Conor Nest, Todd F. Elliott, Tani Cooper, Karl Vernes
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Abstract

The temperate forests of Australia support a high diversity of hypogeous fungi and a wide variety of mycophagous mammals, yet many mammal-fungal relationships are still poorly understood. We studied the seasonal fungal diets of eight sympatric mammals (seven marsupials and one rodent) in a remnant montane eucalypt forest. Fifty-five different fungal taxa were identified from 305 scat samples. Swamp wallabies (Wallabia bicolor), yellow-footed antechinus (Antechinus flavipes) and brown antechinus (A. stuartii) were the primary mycophagists in this community, but all mammals consumed fungi, including three species not previously recorded as mycophagous (eastern grey kangaroo, Macropus giganteus;common wallaroo, Osphranter robustus; and common dunnart, Sminthopsis murina). Winter was the peak season for fungal consumption and dietary diversity of fungi, however, the diversity of taxa ingested varied between species and season. Our work supports the idea that a diverse mycophagous mammal community is important for maintaining natural variation in fungal community composition.

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有袋动物为主的哺乳动物群落对菌根真菌的季节性消耗
澳大利亚的温带森林支持着高度多样的地下真菌和种类繁多的食真菌哺乳动物,但许多哺乳动物与真菌的关系仍知之甚少。我们在一片残留的山地桉树林中研究了八种同域哺乳动物(七种有袋动物和一种啮齿动物)的季节性真菌饮食。从305个粪便样本中鉴定出55个不同的真菌类群。沼泽小袋鼠(双色Wallabia bicolor)、黄脚antechinus(黄脚antechinus flawapes)和棕色Antechinu(A.stuartii。冬季是真菌消费和真菌饮食多样性的高峰期,然而,不同物种和季节摄入的类群多样性不同。我们的工作支持了这样一种观点,即多样化的食真菌哺乳动物群落对于保持真菌群落组成的自然变化很重要。
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来源期刊
Fungal Ecology
Fungal Ecology 环境科学-生态学
CiteScore
5.80
自引率
3.40%
发文量
51
审稿时长
3 months
期刊介绍: Fungal Ecology publishes investigations into all aspects of fungal ecology, including the following (not exclusive): population dynamics; adaptation; evolution; role in ecosystem functioning, nutrient cycling, decomposition, carbon allocation; ecophysiology; intra- and inter-specific mycelial interactions, fungus-plant (pathogens, mycorrhizas, lichens, endophytes), fungus-invertebrate and fungus-microbe interaction; genomics and (evolutionary) genetics; conservation and biodiversity; remote sensing; bioremediation and biodegradation; quantitative and computational aspects - modelling, indicators, complexity, informatics. The usual prerequisites for publication will be originality, clarity, and significance as relevant to a better understanding of the ecology of fungi.
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