Cheating in arbuscular mycorrhizal mutualism: a network and phylogenetic analysis of mycoheterotrophy
2020; Wiley; Volume: 226; Issue: 6 Linguagem: Inglês
10.1111/nph.16474
ISSN1469-8137
AutoresBenoît Perez‐Lamarque, Marc‐André Selosse, Maarja Öpik, Hélène Morlon, Florent Martos,
Tópico(s)Ecology and Vegetation Dynamics Studies
ResumoAlthough mutualistic interactions are widespread and essential in ecosystem functioning, the emergence of uncooperative cheaters threatens their stability, unless there are some physiological or ecological mechanisms limiting interactions with cheaters. In this framework, we investigated the patterns of specialization and phylogenetic distribution of mycoheterotrophic cheaters vs noncheating autotrophic plants and their respective fungi, in a global arbuscular mycorrhizal network with> 25 000 interactions. We show that mycoheterotrophy evolved repeatedly among vascular plants, suggesting low phylogenetic constraints for plants. However, mycoheterotrophic plants are significantly more specialized than autotrophic plants, and they tend to be associated with specialized and closely related fungi. These results raise new hypotheses about the mechanisms (e.g. sanctions, or habitat filtering) that actually limit the interaction of mycoheterotrophic plants and their associated fungi with the rest of the autotrophic plants. Beyond mycorrhizal symbiosis, this unprecedented comparison of mycoheterotrophic vs autotrophic plants provides a network and phylogenetic framework to assess the presence of constraints upon cheating emergences in mutualisms.
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