Lyons, J. I., S. Y. Newell, R. P. Brown, and M. A. Moran.
2005. Screening for bacteria-fungal associations in a south-eastern U.S. salt
marsh using pre-established fungal monocultures. FEMS Microbiol. Ecol. 54:179-187.
Both bacteria and fungi play critical roles in decomposition
processes in many natural environments, yet only rarely have they been studied
as an integrated community. We examined whether physical associations exist
between individual bacterial and fungal species that co-occur on decaying smooth
cordgrass, Spartina alterniflora, in a south-eastern US salt marsh. Fungal-pervaded
decaying Spartina was used as “bait” for potential bacterial associates.
The bundles (infiltrated with one of three dominant fungal members of the decomposer
assemblage, or an autoclaved control) were placed in a salt marsh and collected
biweekly for 6 weeks during the first experiment (late summer 2002), and weekly
for 3 weeks during the second experiment (early summer 2003). Terminal-restriction
fragment length polymorphism (T-RFLP) analysis of 16S rRNA genes was used to
track colonization by bacterial taxa in association with the established fungal
species. T-RFLP analysis of 18S-to-28S internal transcribed spacer (ITS) regions
was used to monitor changes in fungal communities once bundles had been placed
in the field. Results from both years were nearly identical, and showed that
invasion by fungi other than the bait species was slow, resulting in a virtual
fungal monoculture for several weeks into the experiments. Surprisingly, bacterial
communities were unaffected by the identity of the fungal bait. Regardless
of the fungal species, and even in the absence of prior fungal colonization,
bacterial 16S rRNA profiles were remarkably similar. These results suggest
that few species-specific associations, either positive or negative, exist
between bacterial and fungal members of the Spartina decomposer community during
initial colonization.
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