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Citation for Study 1684

About Citation title: "Monotropa uniflora plants of eastern Massachusetts form mycorrhizae with a diversity of russulacean fungi".
About This study was previously identified under the legacy study ID S1646 (Status: Published).

Citation

Yang S., & Pfister D. 2006. Monotropa uniflora plants of eastern Massachusetts form mycorrhizae with a diversity of russulacean fungi. Mycologia, null.

Authors

  • Yang S.
  • Pfister D.

Abstract

Plant species in the subfamily Monotropoideae are mycoheterotrophs; they obtain fixed carbon from photosynthetic plants via a shared mycorrhizal network. Previous findings show mycoheterotrophic plants exhibit a high level of specificity to their mycorrhizal fungi. In this study, we explore the association of mycorrhizal fungi and Monotropa uniflora (Monotropoideae: Ericaceae) in eastern North America. We collected M. uniflora roots and nearby basidiomycete sporocarps from four sites within a 100 km2 area in eastern Massachusetts. We analyzed DNA sequences of the internal transcribed spacer region (ITS) from the fungal nuclear ribosomal gene to assess the genetic diversity of fungi associating with M. uniflora roots. In this analysis we included 20 ITS sequences from Russula sporocarps collected nearby, 44 sequences of Russula or Lactarius species from GenBank, and 12 GenBank sequences of fungi isolated from M. uniflora roots in previous studies. We found that all 56 sampled M. uniflora mycorrhizal fungi were members of the Russulaceae, confirming previous research. The analysis showed that most of the diversity of mycorrhizal fungi spreads across the genus Russula. ITS sequences of the mycorrhizal fungi consisted of 20 different phylotypes: 18 of the genus Russula and 2 of Lactarius, based on GenBank searches. Of the sampled plants, 57% associated with only 3 of the 20 mycorrhizal fungi detected in roots, and of the 25 sporocarp phylotypes collected, 3 were associated with M. uniflora. Furthermore, the results indicate that the number of different fungal phylotypes associating with M. uniflora of eastern North America is higher than that of western North America, but patterns of fungal species abundance may be similar between mycorrhizae from the two locations.

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  • Canonical resource URI: http://purl.org/phylo/treebase/phylows/study/TB2:S1684
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