Endophyte diversity is influenced by host species and environment but
community composition is structured by spatial distance
- Taryn Mueller
, - David Moeller
Taryn Mueller
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University of Minnesota Twin Cities
Corresponding Author:taz.mueller@gmail.com
Author ProfileAbstract
Foliar fungal endophytes are microbial symbionts that inhabit the leaves
of nearly all plant species and can significantly influence host
performance, but the relative influence of dispersal limitation, host
filtering, and environmental variation on endophyte communities remains
poorly understood. We co-sampled fungal endophyte communities from three
herbaceous plant species across a complex landscape of the Sierra
Nevada, California spanning 100 km where environmental and spatial
distance are largely uncorrelated. Our results reveal that across all
three host taxa, spatial distance was the primary driver of endophyte
community composition, with similarity declining with distance
regardless of environmental variation. By contrast, host identity and
environmental factors were the predominant predictors of endophyte
diversity, with hosts showing differing responses to environmental
gradients of temperature, precipitation, solar radiation, and vegetation
cover. While most fungal taxa were unique to a single host species at
the site level, host filtering was inconsistent at larger spatial
scales. Overall, our study reveals that spatial, environmental, and host
factors drive different aspects of foliar fungal endophyte community
structure, with interactive effects highlighting the context-dependent
nature of microbial community assembly.31 Jan 2025Submitted to Molecular Ecology 04 Feb 2025Submission Checks Completed
04 Feb 2025Assigned to Editor
04 Feb 2025Review(s) Completed, Editorial Evaluation Pending
09 Feb 2025Reviewer(s) Assigned