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tool for improving terrestrial restoration but are often overlooked in both restoration planning and |
the assessment of success [13]. Research has shown that fungal amendment can improve the fertility |
Diversity 2020, 12, 0324; doi:10.3390/d12090324 www.mdpi.com/journal/diversity |
Diversity 2020, 12, 0324 2 of 17 |
and water availability of soil [14] and the establishment, growth, and survival of seedlings in restored |
habitats [15]. However, the value of fungal communities for improving restoration success likely |
depends on their composition and diversity, as these properties can influence both their direct and |
indirect effects on ecosystems. For example, a greater diversity of mycorrhizal fungi often results |
in a more efficient exploitation of phosphorus and therefore greater plant growth [16,17]. Similarly, |
a recent study showed that as microbial diversity increased, so did the simultaneous maintenance |
of diverse ecosystem functions and services [18]. Previous restoration studies have demonstrated |
how important the origin of fungal inocula can be for the overall productivity and plant community |
composition of degraded lands [19,20]. Further, inoculating with more complex and field-acquired |
soil microbial communities often results in greater plant growth than commercially available fungi |
(usually single-strain mycorrhizal inocula) [21,22], suggesting that the diversity and composition of |
the fungal community added is important for restoration success. While it is possible to use fungi |
in restoration without detailed knowledge of their communities, understanding the environmental |
factors that affect these assemblages can help steer management decisions to increase the benefit of |
fungal amendments and improve the conservation of fungal diversity in threatened ecosystems. |
One imperiled habitat for which understanding soil fungal communities could help achieve |
meaningful restoration goals are the tree islands of the Florida Everglades. The Greater Everglades |
Ecosystem, which originally spanned over 10,000 km2 of South Florida, is the largest designated |
wilderness in the Eastern United States, a NaturalWorld Heritage Site, a RamsarWetland of International |
Importance, and home to 103 threatened or endangered plants and animals [23]. Unfortunately, this |
unique ecosystem is highly threatened by habitat destruction and the hydrologic changes required |
for urbanization and agriculture as well as by invasive species, climate change, and pollution [24–26]. |
These changes have negatively impacted both the aquatic and terrestrial biodiversity of this system |
(e.g., estimated declines of up to 90% in some wading bird populations and 90–98% declines in |
small mammal populations within Everglades National Park; [25,27]). While much of the Everglades |
landscape is a freshwater wetland characterized by sawgrass marsh and persistently flooded sloughs, |
tree islands—aggregations of woody vegetation on elevated peat or limestone—are important features |
of this ecosystem [28]. In addition to being critical habitats for resting and foraging wading birds, |
American alligators, white-tailed deer, and other animals [29], tree islands are biogeochemical hotspots |
within an otherwise nutrient-poor ecosystem. Despite making up a relatively small portion of the |
landscape (e.g., approximately 4% historically in the central Everglades), tree islands are estimated to |
sequester approximately 67% of the phosphorus in the Everglades (up to 100 times more phosphorus |
than the surrounding wetlands) and promote the retention of nitrogen by the landscape [28,30,31]. |
Urbanization since the 1950s in South Florida has led to anthropogenically driven changes to Everglades |
hydrology, which is believed to be the main driver of tree island loss (up to 87% in some areas) [32]. |
As tree mortality increases, the transition from a “healthy” tree island into a treeless “ghost” island |
is accompanied by a release of sequestered nutrients into the surrounding wetland habitats [30]. |
This nutrient release is thought to have cascading effects on ecosystem and species dynamics in |
these impacted landscapes (e.g., invasive cattails outcompete native sawgrass in high-phosphorus |
areas; [33]). |
As a result of the importance of tree islands in the Everglades and their substantial decline, |
the restoration of ghost islands and creation of constructed tree islands is an important piece of |
the Comprehensive Everglades Restoration Plan [34]. There are several reasons that soil fungi may |
be especially integral to the success of tree island restoration. First, as the primary decomposers, |
soil fungi are likely to play a central role in regulating soil formation [35,36], which is a goal for the |
restoration of both degraded tree islands and self-perpetuating, fully-functioning constructed tree |
islands. Second, soil fungi can be important in nutrient immobilization (e.g., fungi are responsible |
for the immobilization of approximately 20–30% of global phosphorus pools; [1,5]), which could |
help sequester phosphorus and nitrogen within islands and reduce leaching into the surrounding |
wetlands. Third, fungal mutualists (e.g., mycorrhizal fungi) may increase tree island stability by |
Diversity 2020, 12, 0324 3 of 17 |
increasing tree resilience to natural and anthropogenic stress [9], and fungal pathogens may be crucial |
for restoring a natural tree community composition by regulating the abundance of dominant plant |
species [37]. While fungal communities in the peat and periphyton of the Everglades wetlands have |
been investigated in a few cases [38–40], the terrestrial fungal communities of Everglades tree islands |
are unexplored. In fact, we are aware of no studies of the diversity or composition of soil fungal |
communities on Everglades tree islands. To improve the protection, and even utilization, of fungal |
diversity in the restoration of tree islands, studies of the factors that structure these fungal communities |
are needed. Here, we use a set of eight experimental Everglades tree islands, in which abiotic and |
biotic factors have been manipulated to understand tree island formation, to better identify how |
microhabitat environmental variation and experimental restoration decisions may influence fungal |
diversity, composition, and functional guilds. |
2. Materials and Methods |
2.1. Study Site and Environmental Data Collection |
We studied tree island soil fungal communities at the approximately 32-ha Loxahatchee |
Impoundment Landscape Assessment (LILA) facility in Loxahatchee National Wildlife Refuge in |
Palm Beach County, Florida, USA (26.489◦ N, 80.219◦ W). LILA contains eight approximately 2500 m2 |
experimental tree islands that were constructed in 2003 through a collaboration between the South |
Florida Water Management District and the Army Corps of Engineers. LILA is especially suitable |
for investigating how the soil microbiome responds to different restoration decisions, because the |
construction of tree islands allowed landscape-level experimental manipulations of tree island |
characteristics. For instance, the islands’ cores (i.e., bases of the islands) were manipulated to |
represent two common island types in the Everglades: peat core and limestone core islands [41]. |
Using locally sourced peat and limestone derived from the habitat adjacent to the current LILA facility, |
half of the experimental islands were constructed with peat cores and half were constructed with |
limestone cores (Figure S1); then, all the islands were covered with a top layer of peat substrate [42]. |
Similarly, each of the eight experimental islands was split into quadrants in which a mixture of 10 tree |
species were planted at four different densities (1 m, 1.67 m, 2.33 m, and 3 m spacing) in 2006 and |
2007 (Figures S1 and S2). Given the importance of plant-fungal interactions, tree planting density may |
be a biotic factor that strongly affects fungal community composition. In addition, LILA has other |
readily available data on microhabitat variation within and among islands that can help inform our |
understanding of the soil microbiome. For example, because the water level is continuously monitored |
within the macrocosms and the topography of each island is well mapped, it is possible to track the |
hydrology of microhabitats using the DBHydro project from the South Florida Water Management |
District [42]. Using surface water-level data and the elevation of each site, we calculated the average |
site-specific ‘relative water level’ for all plots in 2018 (the year fungi were sampled) following the |
methods in [43]. Further, understory plant communities that recruited to these experimental tree islands |
have been monitored since 2009 [42], allowing for consideration of the understory plant community |
in structuring soil microbiomes. For these understory plant communities, we calculated Shannon |
diversity, Pielou’s evenness, and plant richness for use in our analyses. During the monitoring of |
each site, understory plant biomass was estimated (by applying allometric equations developed from |
separate biomass collection plots to estimates of plant cover). To gain insight into the light environment |
(another abiotic feature of interest), hemispherical canopy photographs were also taken using a digital |
camera (Nikon Coolpix 995; Nikon, Tokyo, Japan) equipped with a hemispherical lens (Nikon Fisheye |
Converter FC-E8 0.21×, Tokyo, Japan) at each site, and canopy openness was determined using the |
software Gap Light Analyzer (GLA), version 2.0, Burnaby, BC, Canada [44]. |
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