粪化石的DNA和孢子显示,新西兰特有的色彩鲜艳的松露状真菌是由已灭绝的恐鸟(鸟硫目)食用的。

IF 2.8 2区 生物学 Q2 BIOLOGY Biology Letters Pub Date : 2025-01-01 Epub Date: 2025-01-15 DOI:10.1098/rsbl.2024.0440
Alexander P Boast, Jamie R Wood, Jerry Cooper, Nic Bolstridge, George L W Perry, Janet M Wilmshurst
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引用次数: 0

摘要

真菌动物(吃真菌的动物)对真菌孢子的传播很重要,包括与森林形成树木共生的外生菌根真菌(ECM)。因此,真菌及其共生体可能受到真菌食性动物灭绝的影响。新西兰(NZ)有多种不同寻常的、色彩鲜艳的、地方性的封存(松露样)真菌,其中大多数是ECM。由于新西兰缺乏本土的陆地哺乳动物(蝙蝠除外),并且固存真菌通常是单调的,并且哺乳动物分散,因此新西兰的固存真菌被假设为适合鸟类传播。然而,这一假设几乎没有直接证据,因为自13世纪人类最初定居以来,新西兰41%的本土陆地鸟类已经灭绝。在这里,我们报告了来自新西兰灭绝的,特有的高地恐鸟(Megalapteryx didinus)的两个粪化石内部的古代DNA和孢子,揭示了ECM真菌的消耗和可能的传播,包括至少一种彩色的封存物种。来自新西兰的当代数据表明,鸟类很少食用真菌,而引入的哺乳动物优先食用外来真菌。因此,与与哺乳动物扩散器共同进化的真菌相比,新西兰特有的隔离真菌的扩散能力可能受到限制。因此,新西兰的真菌群落可能正在经历鸟类真菌捕食者灭绝和哺乳动物真菌捕食者建立后的逐渐物种更替,这可能会影响森林的恢复能力,并促进外来树木分类群的入侵。
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DNA and spores from coprolites reveal that colourful truffle-like fungi endemic to New Zealand were consumed by extinct moa (Dinornithiformes).

Mycovores (animals that consume fungi) are important for fungal spore dispersal, including ectomycorrhizal (ECM) fungi symbiotic with forest-forming trees. As such, fungi and their symbionts may be impacted by mycovore extinction. New Zealand (NZ) has a diversity of unusual, colourful, endemic sequestrate (truffle-like) fungi, most of which are ECM. As NZ lacks native land mammals (except bats), and sequestrate fungi are typically drab and mammal-dispersed, NZ's sequestrate fungi are hypothesized to be adapted for bird dispersal. However, there is little direct evidence for this hypothesis, as 41% of NZ's native land bird species became extinct since initial human settlement in the thirteenth century. Here, we report ancient DNA and spores from the inside of two coprolites of NZ's extinct, endemic upland moa (Megalapteryx didinus) that reveal consumption and likely dispersal of ECM fungi, including at least one colourful sequestrate species. Contemporary data from NZ show that birds rarely consume fungi and that the introduced mammals preferentially consume exotic fungi. NZ's endemic sequestrate fungi could therefore be dispersal limited compared with fungi that co-evolved with mammalian dispersers. NZ's fungal communities may thus be undergoing a gradual species turnover following avian mycovore extinction and the establishment of mammalian mycovores, potentially affecting forest resilience and facilitating invasion by exotic tree taxa.

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来源期刊
Biology Letters
Biology Letters 生物-进化生物学
CiteScore
5.50
自引率
3.00%
发文量
164
审稿时长
1.0 months
期刊介绍: Previously a supplement to Proceedings B, and launched as an independent journal in 2005, Biology Letters is a primarily online, peer-reviewed journal that publishes short, high-quality articles, reviews and opinion pieces from across the biological sciences. The scope of Biology Letters is vast - publishing high-quality research in any area of the biological sciences. However, we have particular strengths in the biology, evolution and ecology of whole organisms. We also publish in other areas of biology, such as molecular ecology and evolution, environmental science, and phylogenetics.
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