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1.
In this paper, we report the effect of Scots pine genotypes on ectomycorrhizal (ECM) community and growth, survival, and foliar nutrient composition of 2-year-old seedlings grown in forest bare-root nursery conditions in Lithuania. The Scots pine seeds originated from five stands from Latvia (P1), Lithuania (P2 and P3), Belarus (P4), and Poland (P5). Based on molecular identification, seven ECM fungal taxa were identified: Suillus luteus and Suillus variegatus (within the Suilloid type), Wilcoxina mikolae, Tuber sp., Thelephora terrestris, Cenococcum geophilum, and Russuloid type. The fungal species richness varied between five and seven morphotypes, depending on seed origin. The average species richness and relative abundance of most ECM morphotypes differed significantly depending on pine origin. The most essential finding of our study is the shift in dominance from an ascomycetous fungus like W. mikolae in P2 and P4 seedlings to basidiomycetous Suilloid species like S. luteus and S. variegatus in P1 and P5 seedlings. Significant differences between Scots pine origin were also found in seedling height, root dry weight, survival, and concentration of C, K, Ca, and Mg in the needles. The Spearman rank correlation coefficient revealed that survival and nutritional status of pine seedlings were positively correlated with abundance of Suilloid mycorrhizas and negatively linked with W. mikolae abundance. However, stepwise multiple regression analysis showed that only survival and magnesium content in pine needles were significantly correlated with abundance of ECM fungi, and Suilloid mycorrhizas were a main significant predictor. Our results may have implications for understanding the physiological and genetic relationship between the host tree and fungi and should be considered in management decisions in forestry and ECM fungus inoculation programs.  相似文献   

2.
Linking roots and ectomycorrhizas (EcM) to individual host trees in the field is required to test whether individual trees support different ectomycorrhizal communities. Here we describe a method that identifies the source of EcM roots by PCR of polymorphic pine nuclear microsatellite loci using fluorescently labelled primers and high-throughput fragment analysis. ITS-PCR can also be performed on the same EcM DNA extract for fungal identification. The method was tested on five neighbouring Scots pine (Pinus sylvestris var scotica) trees in native woodland. Successful host tree identification from DNA extracts of EcM root tips was achieved for 93% of all root fragments recovered from soil cores. It was estimated that each individual mature pine sampled was colonised by between 15 and 19 EcM fungi. The most abundant fungal species were found on all five trees, and within the constraints of the sampling scheme, no differences between trees in EcM fungal community structure or composition were detected.  相似文献   

3.
Foliar fungal species are diverse and colonize all plants, though whether forest tree species composition influences the distribution of these fungal communities remains unclear. Fungal communities include quiescent taxa and the functionally important and metabolically active taxa that respond to changes in the environment. To determine fungal community shifts along a tree species diversity gradient, needles of Norway spruce were sampled from trees from four mature European forests. We hypothesized that the fungal communities and specific fungal taxa would correlate with tree species diversity. Furthermore, the active fungal community, and not the total community, would shift along the tree diversity gradient. High-throughput sequencing showed significant differences in the fungal communities in the different forests, and in one forest, tree diversity effects were observed, though this was not a general phenomenon. Our study also suggests that studying the metabolically active community may not provide additional information about community composition or diversity.  相似文献   

4.
In the United Kingdom, Panolis flammea (Den. and Schiff.) (Lepidoptera: Noctuidae) is an important pest species of the introduced lodgepole pine but not of its natural host Scots pine. The timing of P. flammea larval growth must be synchronized with its host tree if the larvae are to succeed. We collected field data during 1990 which revealed that the phenological window starts earlier in Scots pine and is shorter than that observed in lodgepole pine. The larvae are found in the field earlier and within a narrower time frame within a Scots pine forest than in a lodgepole pine forest. The larval developmental period is significantly longer on lodgepole pine than on Scots pine. The synchrony/asynchrony of P. flammea to its natural host (Scots pine) and an introduced tree (lodgepole pine) results in the parasitoids having a different impact on the larvae of the two hosts. At any one time, the host plant, caterpillars and parasitoids are more synchronous on the ancestral Scots pine than on lodgepole pine, resulting in a higher percentage of larvae in the optimal instar for parasitism at that time. In lodgepole pine, the percentage of suitable instars available to parasitoids is lower at any given time. The information presented here furthers our understanding of the possible mechanisms for the observed differential population dynamics of the insect on Scots pine and lodgepole pine in the UK. Handling editor: Robert Glinwood.  相似文献   

5.
1 The pine beauty moth Panolis flammea has two main host plants in Britain: Pinus sylvestris (Scots pine), which is the ancestral food plant where the insect is never abundant enough to cause tree mortality, and Pinus contorta (lodgepole pine), an introduced host tree that has experienced periodic widespread tree mortality due to this pest.
2 We review the recent literature, published mostly after the year 2000, regarding the impact of natural enemies on the population dynamics of P. flammea in Britain.
3 The natural enemies of P. flammea are more diverse and abundant in Scots pine habitat than in lodgepole pine habitat and some of them show differential selection for P. flammea larvae in Scots pine habitat over those located in lodgepole pine habitat.
4 It is concluded that the difference in the population dynamics of this insect in the two different habitats was probably the result of the P. flammea finding enemy-free space in lodgepole pine habitat.
5 Recent evidence on the diversity and impact of natural enemies on lodgepole pine has demonstrated that they currently have a much more significant impact on this pest than they did in the 1970s and 1980s, when outbreaks were frequent.  相似文献   

6.
To determine the role of environmental and host genetic factors in shaping fungal endophyte communities we used culturing and metabarcoding techniques to quantify fungal taxa within healthy Scots pine (Pinus sylvestris) needles in a 7-y old provenance-progeny trial replicated at three sites. Both methods revealed a community of ascomycete and basidiomycete taxa dominated by the needle pathogen Lophodermium seditiosum. Differences in fungal endophyte taxon composition and diversity indices were highly significant among trial sites. Within two sites, fungal endophyte communities varied significantly among provenances. Furthermore, the communities differed significantly among maternal families within provenances in 11/15 and 7/15 comparisons involving culture and metabarcoding data respectively. We conclude that both environmental and host genetic variation shape the fungal endophyte community of P. sylvestris needles.  相似文献   

7.
The macrofungal communities of Irish native tree species (ash and oak) and exotic tree species (Scots pine and Sitka spruce) forests were examined through the collection of sporocarps over 3 yr. Sampling of 27 plots revealed 186 species of macrofungi, including 10 species new to Ireland. The species richness of non-native Sitka spruce and Scots pine forests was similar to that of native oak forests. However, specific communities of macrofungi existed in each of the forest types as confirmed by non-metric multidimensional scaling and multi-response permutation procedure. Indicator species analysis was used to identify macrofungi which are indicative of the four forest types. The oak community lacked certain species/genera known to be distinctive of oak woods in Britain, possibly due to low inoculum availability as a result of historic removal of Ireland’s oak forests. Our results indicate that, while being similar to native forests in species richness, non-native forests of Sitka spruce and Scots pine in Ireland harbour many fungal species which are not typical of native forests, particularly members of the genus Cortinarius.  相似文献   

8.
1 In 1996, 7000 ha of pine forests were defoliated by the pine looper Bupalus piniaria in south‐western Sweden. 2 The susceptibility of trees of different defoliation classes (0, 30, 60, 90 and 100% defoliation) to beetle‐vectored blue‐stain fungi was tested in inoculation experiments. Forty and 120‐year‐old Scots pine trees were inoculated with ‘single’, i.e. a few inoculations of Leptographium wingfieldii and Ophiostoma minus, two blue‐stain fungi associated with the pine shoot beetle Tomicus piniperda. The young trees were also ‘mass’ inoculated with L. wingfieldii at a density of 400 inoculation points per m2 over a 60 cm stem belt. 3 Host tree symptoms indicated that only trees with 90–100% defoliation were susceptible to the mass inoculation. 4 Single inoculations did not result in any consistent differences in fungal performance between trees of different defoliation classes, regardless of inoculated species or tree age class. 5 Leptographium wingfieldii produced larger reaction zones than O. minus, and both species produced larger lesions in old than in young trees. 6 As beetle‐induced tree mortality in the study area occurred only in totally defoliated stands, mass inoculations seem to mimic beetle‐attacks fairly well, and thus seem to be a useful tool for assessing host resistance. 7 As even severely defoliated pine trees were quite resistant, host defence reactions in Scots pine seem to be less dependent on carbon allocation than predicted by carbon‐based defence hypotheses.  相似文献   

9.
The phyllosphere microbial populations inhabiting the needles of three conifer species, Scots pine (Pinus sylvestris L.), Sitka spruce (Picea sitchensis L.) and Norway spruce (Picea abies (L.) Karst.), exposed to SO2 and O3, in an open-air fumigation experiment were analysed over a 3 year period using serial dilution after washing, direct plating and a fluorescein diacetate (FDA) enzyme assay. Total fungal populations ranged from 102 to 105 colonyforming units (CPU) g?1 fresh weight of needles. The dominant fungi isolated from needles varied with tree species and isolation technique; Aureobasidium pullulans (de Bary) Arnaud was most common on Scots pine and Norway spruce and white yeasts on Sitka spruce using the dilution plating method. However, direct plating of needle segments onto culture media indicated that Sclerophoma pythiophila (Corda) Hohnel was dominant on Scots pine and A. pullulans on Sitka and Norway spruce. Green needles of Sitka spruce were found to be endophytically colonized by Rhizosphaera kalkhoffii Bubak, but seldom by Lophodermium piceae (Fuckel) Hohn during extensive sampling in 1990. Statistical analyses revealed significant differences (P<0.05) between plots in the 3 year mean of the total fungal populations or the fungal biomass (FDA assay) on all three tree species. Differences between plots were also observed for a number of dominant component species. Data were also analysed for treatment effects. A significant effect of SO2 treatment was observed on the total fungal populations on Sitka spruce (P<0.05) which were reduced markedly by the low-SO2 treatment, while the O3 treatment caused a significant increase in total fungal numbers on Scots pine (P<0.05). The FDA activity on needles of both Scots pine and Sitka spruce was noticeably higher in the 03-only treatment plot, but the overall O3 effect was not significant. Treatment effects were also detected on the occurrence of component species. The serial dilution method revealed an SO2 effect (P<0.05) of a reduction in the occurrence of pink yeasts on Sitka spruce and an O3 effect (P<0.05) of an increase in the occurrence of S. pythiophila on Sitka spruce (P<0.01) but a decrease of Epicoccum nigrum Link and Cladosporium spp. on Scots pine. The direct-plating method revealed an SO2 effect of an increase in S. pythiophila on Norway spruce (P<0.05). Ozone treatment caused a significant increase in the isolation of a black strain of A. pullulans on Norway spruce (P<0.05). Endophytic colonization of Sitka spruce needles by R. kalkhoffii was found to be increased on two occasions by O3 exposure.  相似文献   

10.
Polypore fungal diversity and host density in a moist tropical forest   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
In a moist tropical forest in Panama, the wood-decay polyporefungi comprise many rare species (more than half found only once) andexhibit diversity that exceeds that of the supporting tree community.The most abundant fungal species were non-specialists, each found onseveral host species from multiple plant families. In diverse fungalcommunities, each of many species should infect a given host species ina density-dependent manner, so that the infected proportion of a hostpopulation should increase with host density. Applied across hostspecies, hosts with denser populations should support greater fungaldiversity. For 10 tree species, fungal incidence and diversity increasedwith abundance of the host in the community, consistent withacross-species density-dependent infection. Fungal diversity associatedwith individual trunks did not, however, vary with host-species density.Both host density and persistence of decaying logs may be important indetermining fungal diversity associated with tree species.  相似文献   

11.
The effects of enhanced UV‐B radiation on the needle anatomy of loblolly pine (Pinus taeda L.) and Scots pine (Pinus sylvestris L.) were studied in the field under supplemental UV‐B radiation supplied by a modulated irradiation system. The supplemental UV‐B levels were designed to simulate either a 16 or 25% loss of stratospheric ozone over College Park, Maryland. Enhanced UV‐B radiation caused different responses in these two species. The needles of loblolly pine had larger amounts of tannin in the lumen of epidermal cells and more wall‐bound phenolics in the outer epidermal walls of UV‐B‐treated needles, whereas the most pronounced effect on Scots pine needles was increased cutinization. In both species, the outer epidermal cell walls thickened and the needle cross‐sectional and mesophyll areas decreased (statistically significantly only in Scots pine). This suggests that more carbon may have been allocated to the protection mechanisms at the expense of photosynthetic area. The difference in response between these species suggests that the response to UV‐B radiation is not mediated by a single mechanism and that no generalization with regard to the effects of UV‐B on conifers can be made.  相似文献   

12.
Needle damages caused by mining insects on Scots pine and Norway spruce were studied in the vicinity or a pulp mill. The abundance of needles mined by the pine bud moth Exoteleia dodecella (Lepidoptera: Gelechiidae) on Scots pine Pinus sylvestris , and the spruce needle miner Epinotia tedella (Lepidoptera: Tortricidae) on Norway spruce Picea abies had a significantly peaked response curve on logarithmic distance scale. For pine bud moth, the maximum expected population density was estimated to be at the distance of 1.35 km from the factory. The maximum expected population density for the spruce needle miner was at the distance of 1.53 km from the factory. However, for both species the curves were significantly different among transects. Both species had a peaked and significant response to sulphur level in needles as well. The maximum expected density in pine was at 1270 ppm, and in spruce at 1070 ppm sulphur concentration in pine needles. The results are consistent with earlier reports demonstrating that these mining insects frequently attack trees suffering from air pollution. The nonlinear response of both species to distance from the pulp mill suggests that E. dodecella on pine and E. tedella on spruce are rather indicators of the zone of intermediate air pollution than of strongly polluted or nearly unpolluted sites. This also agrees with the plant stress-insect performance hypothesis indicating that insect response varies with the magnitude of stress, and at very high stress levels a tree no longer provides the insects with relevant food.  相似文献   

13.
A. D. Watt 《Oecologia》1989,78(2):251-258
Summary This paper reports part of a study to determine why damaging outbreaks of the pine beauty moth, Panolis flammea (D & S) (Lepidoptera: Noctuidae), in Scotland are frequent on lodgepole pine but do not occur on Scots pine, and why outbreaks on lodgepole pine are mainly confined to trees growing in deep unflushed peat. The elongation of shoots and the growth of needles of Scots pine occurred later in the season than did those of lodgepole pine. The foliage of Scots pine generally had a higher level of nitrogen, and consistently had a higher level of phosporus, but had a consistently lower level of tannins than that of lodgepole pine during the period when the larvae were feeding each year. The nitrogen content of the foliage of lodgepole pine growing in an iron pan soil was generally higher than that of lodgepole pine growing in deep peat during the same period but there were no general differences in the phosphorus or tannin contents of lodgepole pine in the 2 soil types. These findings suggest that Scots pine is a more suitable host plant than lodgepole pine and that the foliage of lodgepole pine growing in deep peat is not more suitable than lodgepole pine growing in an iron pan soil. On the basis of the chemical analyses used in this study, it is concluded that the abundance of pine beauty moth in Scotland is not strongly influenced by the nutritional suitability of its host plants.  相似文献   

14.
Nitrogen metabolism of the needles of 40-year-old Douglas fir and Scots pine trees, growing in two forest stands on cation-poor and acidic sandy soil with a relatively high atmospheric nitrogen deposition was studied. The composition of the free amino acid (FAA) pool, the concentrations of total nitrogen and soluble protein and the activities of glutamine synthetase (GS) and glutamate dehydrogenase (GDH) were determined in the needles. An excessive nitrogen supply by a high atmospheric nitrogen deposition in both forest stands was indicated by the high concentrations of total nitrogen and the amino acids arginine, glutamic acid, glutamine and aspartic acid in control trees. In addition the effect of optimal nutrition and water supply (fertigation) on the needle nitrogen metabolism was evaluated. The total concentration of the FAA pool in needles of both tree species was lower in the fertigated than in the non-fertigated (control) trees, except for 1-year-old needles of Scots pine, in which the concentration after fertigation did not differ from the control. The lower total FAA concentration in the fertigated trees could be attributed to arginine, the concentration of which was on average 60% lower than in the control. Neither the concentration of soluble protein nor the activity of GS were influenced by fertigation. The activity of GDH in fertigated trees only differed significantly from the control in October. Scots pine needles had higher concentrations of protein (50%) and higher activities of GS (44%) and GDH (25%) than Douglas fir needles. Possible explanations for the lower vitality of Douglas fir compared to Scots pine are given.  相似文献   

15.
The data on Scots pine responses to elevated ozone (O3) mainly come from experimental studies with young seedlings and trees. Based on the 38 experiments reviewed here, Scots pine may be considered as an O3-sensitive conifer species, with mature pines more sensitive than younger trees. This is due to their relatively small proportion of current (c) year needles with the highest photosynthetic capacity. Moreover, young seedlings and trees seem to acclimate to slightly elevated realistic O3 exposures, and hence do not often exhibit growth and biomass reductions in spite of the visible and microscopic needle injuries and changes in needle chemistry. The O3 sensitivity in Scots pine is thought to relate to impaired water status due to the malfunction of stomata and subsequent increase in transpiration. This may lead to reduced wood biomass in the long term, if Scots pines try to maximise the biomass of c needles and root biomass to maintain efficient water and nitrogen (N) supply to support the photosynthesis of c needles. Tree water status also contributes to the spring-time recovery of photosynthesis. We call especially for studies on atmosphere–needle surface interaction that would yield novel information on the impact of O3 on epicuticular waxes and stomatal functioning, which both regulate O3 flux and tree water status and hence also modify photosynthesis. The need for flux-based field studies is especially important in the light of future climatic change, since the risk presented by O3 to Scots pine forests in Northern and Central Europe seems to be equal.  相似文献   

16.
This study investigated fungal endophytes in the needles of Norway spruce (Picea abies) cuttings in relation to host tree growth. We also determined the prevalence of endophytes in needles incubated for six months. The cuttings originated from clonal origins showing slow- and fast-growth in long-term field trials but the heritable differences in growth rate were not yet detected among the studied cutting. Endophytes were isolated from surface-sterilized needles with culture-free DNA techniques. No significant differences were observed between endophyte communities of slow- and fast-growing clonal origins. However, the endophyte community correlated with the current growth rate of cuttings suggesting that endophytes reflect short- rather than long-term performance of a host. The concentration of condensed tannins was similar in slow- and fast-growing clonal origins but it showed a negative relationship with endophyte species richness, implying that these secondary compounds may play an important role in spruce tolerance against fungal infections. More than a third of endophyte species were detected in both fresh and decomposing needles, indicating that many needle endophytes are facultative saprotrophs. Several potentially pathogenic fungal species were also found within the community of saprotrophic endophytes.  相似文献   

17.
Lovelock CE  Andersen K  Morton JB 《Oecologia》2003,135(2):268-279
Arbuscular mycorrhizal (AM) fungi are mutualists with plant roots that are proposed to enhance plant community diversity. Models indicate that AM fungal communities could maintain plant diversity in forests if functionally different communities are spatially separated. In this study we assess the spatial and temporal distribution of the AM fungal community in a wet tropical rainforest in Costa Rica. We test whether distinct fungal communities correlate with variation in tree life history characteristics, with host tree species, and the relative importance of soil type, seasonality and rainfall. Host tree species differ in their associated AM fungal communities, but differences in the AM community between hosts could not be generalized over life history groupings of hosts. Changes in the relative abundance of a few common AM fungal species were the cause of differences in AM fungal communities for different host tree species instead of differences in the presence and absence of AM fungal species. Thus, AM fungal communities are spatially distinguishable in the forest, even though all species are widespread. Soil fertility ranging between 5 and 9 Mg/ha phosphorus did not affect composition of AM fungal communities, although sporulation was more abundant in lower fertility soils. Sampling soils over seasons revealed that some AM fungal species sporulate profusely in the dry season compared to the rainy season. On one host tree species sampled at two sites with vastly different rainfall, relative abundance of spores from Acaulospora was lower and that of Glomus was relatively higher at the site with lower and more seasonal rainfall.  相似文献   

18.
In vivo nitrate reductase (EC 1.6.6.1) activity was measured in seedlings of Scots pine ( Pinus sylvestris L.) inoculated with Cenococcum geophilum (Sow.) Ferd. & Winge, Paxillus involutus (Batsch:Fr) Fr, Piloderma croceum Erikss, & Hjortst, and Suillus variegatus (Fr.) O. Kuntze. The activity was higher in the mycorrhizal pine roots than was previously found in the fungus symbiont alone, but lower than in the roots of nonmycorrhizal pine seedlings. The differences observed in a previous study between the fungal species under pure culture conditions were not found in the present work for mycorrhiza synthezised with the same fungal species. An increase in the nitrate concentration of the nutrient solution increased the proportion of the nitrate reductase activity in the needles. The mycorrhizal root tips had higher nitrate reductase activity than nonmycorrhizal root tips in the same root system.  相似文献   

19.
Abstract 1. The work reported here analysed host utilisation by the pine processionary moth Thaumetopoea pityocampa (Lepidoptera: Thaumetopoeidae), the relationship between moth oviposition patterns and larval performance, the chemical characteristics of the plant in relation to the performance of different larval instars, and the role of these factors in the outbreak capacity of the species. In order to do this, a combination of field and laboratory techniques was used to study three pine species differing in nutritional characteristics.
2. Moths oviposited in the three pine species analysed, although cluster pine received a lower number of batches. Late-instar larvae were able to feed on all three pine species, however first-instar larvae developed on Scots and black pine but died on cluster pine. Consequently, oviposition in cluster pine can be considered an oviposition mistake, and indicates that moths are rather unselective when ovipositing on different pine species.
3. Chemical analysis of needles suggested that the quantity of nitrogen was the main factor responsible for the difference in survival of larvae.
4. The oviposition pattern of the moth and the larval susceptibility to food quality in Thaumetopoea pityocampa agree with the theory that unselective oviposition of the moth is a precondition for eruptive dynamics in phytophagous insects.
5. The success of the larvae depends mainly on the probability of the moth finding a suitable host. This probability is determined strongly by the changes of structure and coverage in Mediterranean pine woodlands, due to human management.  相似文献   

20.
The potential of Scots pine (Pinus sylvestris) for regeneration and encroachment onto dry grasslands in the forest-steppe ecotone was experimentally studied at the south-eastern distribution limit of the species in Mongolia. The experiment consisted of a sowing and planting (2-year old seedlings) assay at two different distances from the forest line and manipulation of the water supply by irrigation in one half of the replicate plots. Seedling emergence was strongly inhibited by post-dispersal seed predation (between 50 and >90 % of the seeds were apparently consumed) and by drought. Seedling survival was limited by drought and phytopathogenic fungi that infected the needles. Herbivory by insects or rodents, a key factor for seedling mortality in Larix sibirica, the most frequent tree species in Mongolia’s forest-steppe ecotone, was of little importance in Scots pine, probably due to the production of efficient allelochemicals. The potential of Scots pine to regenerate in Mongolia’s forest-steppe ecotone and to encroach onto the steppe is very limited and mostly restricted to the immediate vicinity of the forest; it might even decrease in future in the face of climate warming. The observed dependence of seedling emergence and survival on soil moisture suggests that regeneration outside the forest may only be successful in exceptionally moist years. Livestock grazing is certainly an additional limiting factor for Scots pine regeneration in Mongolia, but was not relevant in the present study area.  相似文献   

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