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Fungal communities associated with acorn woodpeckers and their excavations
Institution:1. Center for Forest Mycology Research, United States Department of Agriculture, Forest Service, Northern Research Station, One Gifford Pinchot Drive, Madison, WI, 53726, USA;2. Department of Plant Pathology, University of Florida, Gainesville, FL, 32611, USA;3. Department of Biological Sciences, Old Dominion University, Norfolk, VA, 23529, USA;4. Cornell Lab of Ornithology, 159 Sapsucker Woods Road, Ithaca, NY, 14850, USA;5. Hastings Reservation, University of California Berkeley, 38601 E. Carmel Valley Rd., Carmel Valley, CA, 93924, USA
Abstract:Wood-decay fungi soften wood, putatively providing opportunities for woodpeckers to excavate an otherwise hard substrate, yet the fungal community composition in tree cavities and the specificity of these relationships is largely unknown. We used high-throughput amplicon sequencing of the fungal ITS2 region to examine the fungal communities associated with acorn woodpeckers (Melanerpes formicivorus) and their cavities in mature valley oak (Quercus lobata) and blue oak (Q. douglasii) trees in an oak savannah of central coastal California, USA. Acorn woodpeckers and their excavations harbored over 1500 fungal taxa, including more than 100 putative wood-decay fungi. The fungal communities found on the birds were more similar to those found in excavated cavities than those found in trees without excavated holes. These results suggest that symbiotic associations between acorn woodpeckers and fungi are highly diverse, with low specificity. Symbiotic associations between cavity-excavators and fungi are likely more common and widespread than previously thought.
Keywords:Cavity nester  Decay  HTS  Microbiome  Mycobiome  Next-generation sequencing  Picidae  Tree hole
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