Global diversity and geography of planktonic marine fungi

  • Brandon T. Hassett
    Department of Arctic and Marine Biology , University of Tromsø – The Arctic University of Norway , 9037 Tromsø , Norway
  • Tobias R. Vonnahme
    Department of Arctic and Marine Biology , University of Tromsø – The Arctic University of Norway , 9037 Tromsø , Norway
  • Xuefeng Peng
    Marine Science Institute , University of California Santa Barbara , Santa Barbara , CA , USA
  • E.B. Gareth Jones
    Department of Botany and Microbiology, College of Science , King Saud University , P.O. Box 2455 , Riyadh 11451 , Kingdom of Saudi Arabia
  • Céline Heuzé
    Department of Earth Sciences , University of Gothenburg , Box 460 , 405 30 Gothenburg , Sweden

書誌事項

公開日
2019-07-24
権利情報
  • http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0
DOI
  • 10.1515/bot-2018-0113
公開者
Walter de Gruyter GmbH

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説明

<jats:title>Abstract</jats:title> <jats:p>Growing interest in understanding the relevance of marine fungi to food webs, biogeochemical cycling, and biological patterns necessitates establishing a context for interpreting future findings. To help establish this context, we summarize the diversity of cultured and observed marine planktonic fungi from across the world. While exploring this diversity, we discovered that only half of the known marine fungal species have a publicly available DNA locus, which we hypothesize will likely hinder accurate high-throughput sequencing classification in the future, as it does currently. Still, we reprocessed >600 high-throughput datasets and analyzed 4.9 × 10<jats:sup>9</jats:sup> sequences (4.8 × 10<jats:sup>9</jats:sup> shotgun metagenomic reads and 1.0 × 10<jats:sup>8</jats:sup> amplicon sequences) and found that every fungal phylum is represented in the global marine planktonic mycobiome; however, this mycobiome is generally predominated by three phyla: the Ascomycota, Basidiomycota, and Chytridiomycota. We hypothesize that these three clades are the most abundant due to a combination of evolutionary histories, as well as physical processes that aid in their dispersal. We found that environments with atypical salinity regimes (>5 standard deviations from the global mean: Red Sea, Baltic Sea, sea ice) hosted higher proportions of the Chytridiomycota, relative to open oceans that are dominated by Dikarya. The Baltic Sea and Mediterranean Sea had the highest fungal richness of all areas explored. An analysis of similarity identified significant differences between oceanographic regions. There were no latitudinal gradients of marine fungal richness and diversity observed. As more high-throughput sequencing data become available, expanding the collection of reference loci and genomes will be essential to understanding the ecology of marine fungi.</jats:p>

収録刊行物

  • Botanica Marina

    Botanica Marina 63 (2), 121-139, 2019-07-24

    Walter de Gruyter GmbH

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