Not poles apart: Antarctic soil fungal communities show similarities to those of the distant Arctic

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DOI

  • Filipa Cox
    University of Manchester
  • Kevin K. Newsham
    British Antarctic Survey, Natural Environment Research Council (NERC)
  • Roland Bol
    Institute of Bio- and Geosciences, IBG-3
  • Jennifer A. J. Dungait
    Department of Sustainable Agriculture Sciences, Rothamsted Research
  • Clare H. Robinson
    University of Manchester
Abstract Antarctica's extreme environment and geographical isolation offers a useful platform for testing the relative roles of environmental selection and dispersal barriers influencing fungal communities. The former process should lead to convergence in community composition with other cold environments, such as those in the Arctic. Alternatively, dispersal limitations should minimise similarity between Antarctica and distant northern landmasses. Using high-throughput sequencing, we show that Antarctica shares significantly more fungi with the Arctic, and more fungi display a bipolar distribution, than would be expected in the absence of environmental filtering. In contrast to temperate and tropical regions, there is relatively little endemism, and a strongly bimodal distribution of range sizes. Increasing southerly latitude is associated with lower endemism and communities increasingly dominated by fungi with widespread ranges. These results suggest that micro-organisms with well-developed dispersal capabilities can inhabit opposite poles of the Earth, and dominate extreme environments over specialised local species.

Keywords

  • Biogeography, dispersal, environmental filtering, polar environments, soil fungi
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)528-536
Number of pages9
JournalEcology Letters
Volume19
Issue number5
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2 Mar 2016
Externally publishedYes
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