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Effects of Forest Use on Aphyllophoraceous Fungal Community Structure in Sarawak, Malaysia
Authors:Satoshi Yamashita  Tsutomu Hattori  Kuniyasu Momose  Michiko Nakagawa  Masahiro Aiba  Tohru Nakashizuka
Institution:Research Institute for Humanity and Nature, Kyoto, 603-8047, Japan;Microbial Ecology Laboratory, Forestry and Forest Products Research Institute, Tsukuba 305-8687, Japan;Department of Agriculture, Ehime University, Matsuyama 790-8566, Japan;Graduate School of Bioagricultural Sciences, Nagoya University, Nagoya 464-8601, Japan;Graduate School of Life Sciences, Tohoku University, Sendai 980–8578, Japan
Abstract:Aphyllophoraceous fungi are expected to reflect changes in the environmental conditions caused by forest use. To reveal the effects of forest uses on the fungal community structure, we performed a 3‐month survey of aphyllophoraceous species in five forest types (undisturbed primary forest, isolated patches of primary forest, old and young fallow forest, and rubber plantations) in Sarawak, Malaysia in 2005. We used a canonical correspondence analysis (CCA) to reveal the relationships between fungal community composition and the environmental variables (canopy openness, soil water potential, amount and composition of coarse woody debris, litter mass, basal area, plant species composition). A total of 155 samples from 67 species were collected during the study period. The fungal species density represented by the number of species in a transect differed significantly among forest types. The fungal species density increased significantly with increasing number of pieces of coarse woody debris (CWD), but decreased significantly with increasing the scores of second axis of principal component analysis (PCA) for plant species composition. In the CCA ordination, automatic forward selection revealed that only the number of pieces of CWD significantly affected the fungal species composition. The occurrences of Flabellophora licmophora, Coriolopsis retropicta, Microporus vernicipes, and Amauroderma subrugosum were positively correlated with the number of pieces of CWD. Our study clearly demonstrated that forest use negatively affected aphyllophoraceous fungal diversity and suggest that the quantity of CWD would be an important determinant of fungal diversity and composition.
Keywords:Aphyllophorales  Basidiomycetes  coarse woody debris  rubber plantation  shifting cultivation  species diversity  wood-inhabiting fungi
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