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What determines species composition and diversity of hypogeous fungi in the diet of small mammals? A comparison across mammal species,habitat types and seasons in Central European mountains
Institution:1. Institute of Botany, Faculty of Biology, Jagiellonian University in Kraków, 3 Gronostajowa str., PL-30-387, Kraków, Poland;2. Pieniny National Park, 107B Jagiellońska str., PL-34-450, Kro?cienko n/Dunajcem, Poland;3. Institute of Environmental Sciences, Faculty of Biology, Jagiellonian University in Kraków, 7 Gronostajowa str., PL-30-387, Kraków, Poland;4. Institute of Nature Conservation, Polish Academy of Sciences, 33 Adama Mickiewicza Ave., PL-31-120, Kraków, Poland
Abstract:Interactions between diverse groups of organisms influence the functioning and diversity of ecosystems. Salient examples of such relationships are those among hypogeous fungi, trees and mycophagous mammals. To investigate the role of small mammals in transporting fungal spores within and outside forests as well as the influence of seasons, habitats and species on small mammal mycophagy, we set up a study in the Pieniny Mts, Western Carpathians (Southern Poland). The droppings of small mammals were collected during live trapping in July and September 2016 and 2017, to analyze richness, composition and frequency of fungal spores present in faeces. The yellow-necked mouse Apodemus flavicollis, the bank vole Myodes glareolus and the common vole Microtus arvalis were the most frequently trapped. Spores of 27 fungal taxa from 16 genera were retrieved from nearly 70% of faecal samples of rodents and shrews, with up to 9 spore taxa recorded per sample. Spore diversity in samples was higher in September than in July, although seasonal variation was year and animal dependent. The highest mean number of fungal taxa per sample was recorded for the bank vole and the yellow-necked mouse, with the former species showing a higher degree of mycophagy. The two rodents differed in the average frequencies of consumed fungi in samples, which could result from some degree of specialization in the choice of particular fungal species, as shown by the laboratory-based experiment. Within particular animal species, differences in the fungal diet were found between seasons. The spores of hypogeous fungi were transported from forests to meadows mostly by the yellow-necked mouse and, to a lesser extent, by the common vole. However, both, the diversity and the number of transported spores diminished with distance from the forest edge.
Keywords:Mycophagy  Forest ecology  Rodents  Shrews  Forest fungi  Mycorrhizal fungi
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