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five sites. Core type and relative water level were also included in the best model for the number of |
functional guilds (core type: F1,63 = 2.92, p = 0.1378; relative water level: F1,63 = 0.87, p = 0.3521), with an |
18% greater number of guilds in peat compared to limestone core islands and an approximately 8% |
decrease in the driest compared to wettest sites. When we examined the factors that influence |
abundances of the three most common guilds from our dataset, the abundance of only one—plant |
pathogen-wood saprotroph—could be explained by any of our measured variables. As the relative |
water level decreased, the abundance of the plant pathogen–wood saprotroph guild increased (F1,68 |
= 5.47, p = 0.022; Figure 3B). |
Figure 3. Factors involved in the distribution of fungal functional guilds. The number of functional |
guilds was positively associated with understory plant community evenness (A; F1,61 = 10.12, p = |
0.002). As the relative water level decreased, the abundance of the plant pathogen-wood saprotroph |
guild increased (B; F1,61 = 10.12, p = 0.002). The lines are based on a linear model between variables |
with the shaded area indicating the 95% confidence interval and each point representing a site on the |
tree islands. Note that functional guild analyses are based on the approximately 20% exact sequence |
variants (ESVs) that could be identified at the species level using UNITE. |
4. Discussion |
To better incorporate fungal communities into restoration planning in terms of both protecting |
their diversity and utilizing these hidden players to improve restoration success, a more complete |
understanding of which environmental factors and management decisions affect soil fungal |
Figure 3. Factors involved in the distribution of fungal functional guilds. The number of functional |
guilds was positively associated with understory plant community evenness (A; F1,61 = 10.12, p = 0.002). |
As the relative water level decreased, the abundance of the plant pathogen-wood saprotroph guild |
increased (B; F1,61 = 10.12, p = 0.002). The lines are based on a linear model between variables with the |
shaded area indicating the 95% confidence interval and each point representing a site on the tree islands. |
Note that functional guild analyses are based on the approximately 20% exact sequence variants (ESVs) |
that could be identified at the species level using UNITE. |
Diversity 2020, 12, 0324 9 of 17 |
4. Discussion |
To better incorporate fungal communities into restoration planning in terms of both protecting |
their diversity and utilizing these hidden players to improve restoration success, a more complete |
understanding of which environmental factors and management decisions affect soil fungal |
communities is required. Our study contributes to this goal by showing that (1) fungal diversity and |
composition were affected by restoration decision factors that were manipulated on experimental |
tree islands during their construction, and (2) variation in several important aspects of fungal |
communities was explained by microhabitat differences in other environmental variables of interest |
for management, including hydrology and properties of the naturally recruiting plant understory |
community. Below, we address these results in more detail by first examining possible mechanisms |
through which abiotic factors, and then biotic factors, can contribute to fungal community composition |
and diversity. We conclude by briefly discussing directions for future research and the implications for |
the Everglades. |
4.1. Abiotic Factors: The Role of Hydrology, Island Core Type, and Light Environment in Fungal Diversity |
and Composition |
Abiotic stressors play important roles in limiting organismal niches [54], and thus abiotic |
contexts often contribute substantially to the diversity and composition of communities in |
nature [55]. Previous work in the Everglades has identified abiotic features that affect communities |
of macro-organisms on tree islands [56,57]. For instance, the tree island plant community structure |
is largely driven by water level, nutrient availability, and disturbance (e.g., fire, windstorms, |
and drought) [30]. Our study found that the fungal community composition and/or diversity on tree |
islands also appear to respond strongly to all three of the abiotic factors investigated—relative water |
level, light environment, and core type. In particular, hydrology was important for the composition |
and diversity of the soil fungal community, with greater fungal diversity at sites with higher water |
levels. We saw a 34% increase in fungal diversity when comparing the five wettest sites to the five |
driest sites. This shift in fungal diversity and composition is likely due to the sensitivity of some |
species of fungi to dry conditions [58,59] or the increased dispersal of spores to wetter sites [38,60]. |
Hydrology is one of the most anthropogenically altered aspects of the Everglades, with much of the |
historic sheet flow from central to southern Florida now diverted through approximately 1800 miles |
of levees and canals [61]. This change has generally led to a change of inundation periods for tree |
islands [62]. Given the substantial decrease in fungal diversity we found at dry sites in our study, it is |
likely that these major alterations to tree island inundation are also having extensive consequences |
for the fungal communities affected by water diversions. As a result of the importance of fungi in |
ecosystem functions [1], a loss of fungal diversity on unnaturally dry tree islands may underpin |
mechanisms causing tree island loss (e.g., reduced availability of the beneficial symbionts on which |
trees depend, or a loss of high-quality decomposers required for nutrient recycling). These shifts in |
diversity and composition also suggest the importance of hydrologic restoration targets that consider |
fungal ecology, and tree island restoration and creation success may be assisted by a more careful |
consideration of these important constituents of soil biota. |
In addition, our investigation of abiotic factors demonstrated that early restoration decisions |
can have abiding effects on fungal communities years later. In 2003, the experimental islands at |
LILA were constructed with two core types—peat and limestone—to represent the natural variation |
in Everglades tree islands. We found that differences in the choice of core type affected the overall |
fungal community composition, including a significant difference between limestone core and peat |
core communities along both axes of variation in community composition. Further research into the |
indicator taxa identified for limestone versus peat core islands revealed functional differences among |
these taxa. Indicator taxa of peat communities included ectomycorrhizal fungi [63,64], while those in |
limestone communities included taxa described as putative wood-decayers and saprotrophs [65–67]. |
The distinctions in fungal communities on the two core types are presumably the result of the different |
Diversity 2020, 12, 0324 10 of 17 |
soil environments they provide [68]. For instance, previous studies of the tree islands at LILA have |
suggested increased water retention on peat islands compared to limestone [69,70]. The presence of |
limestone may also change the mineral content of soils through inputs of calcium carbonate, which has |
been associated with significant shifts in soil microbial communities in other systems [71]. In addition, |
the difference in some of these indicator taxa could also be the result of the presence of the tree |
Morella cerifera, which is the only surveyed species on the islands that has been reported to associate |
with ectomycorrhizal fungi (in addition to its association with arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi) [72]. |
Morella cerifera had a somewhat lower survival rate on peat core islands, indicating they are more |
stressed on these islands, which may result in an increased reliance on ectomycorrhizal fungi to |
ameliorate stress [42]. Therefore, we examined whether the presence of M. cerifera was predictive of |
the estimated abundance (total number of reads) of the ectomycorrhizal indicator taxa. While we did |
not find support for a clear relationship between M. cerifera presence and these ectomycorrhizal fungi |
(p > 0.05 in a distribution-free randomization test with the presence of M. cerifera and island identity in |
the model), additional studies that investigate unmeasured aspects of M. cerifera biology, such as tree |
size, and the root colonization of this tree may help elucidate if and how it influences ectomycorrhizal |
abundance. More generally, the effect of core type in our study indicates that initial decisions in tree |
island construction have cascading effects on the fungal community, even 15 years later. |
We also found that as light availability increased (as indicated by canopy openness), fungal richness |
also increased. While light environments can have consequences for the soil microbiome through effects |
on soil temperature and moisture [73], light may act indirectly through its effects on the understory |
plant community [74]. Further investigation of this possibility using an RDA (Redundancy Analysis) |
with plant understory community composition data as the response and the same explanatory abiotic |
and biotic factors used in the fungal analyses showed that canopy openness did not explain variation |
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