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Symbiosis (2012) 57:57–71 DOI 10.1007/s13199-012-0179-x Below-ground ectomycorrhizal communities: the effect of small scale spatial and short term temporal variation Richard O’Hanlon Received: 15 March 2012 / Accepted: 12 July 2012 / Published online: 1 August 2012 # Springer Science+Business Media B.V. 2012 Abstract Ectomycorrhizal (ECM) associations are an important form of symbiosis for the majority of tree species. In forest ecosystems where nutrients are often limited, ECM associations are vital for seedling establishment and tree survival. ECM communities are often very species rich and frequently follow the log normal distribution—with a few species being abundant and many species being rare. Much of the current knowledge of ECM communities has been revealed through a combination of above-ground sporocarp and below-ground root tip analyses. However, above-ground surveys of ECM communities reveal largely different findings regarding ECM diversity and community structure to below-ground surveys. Therefore below-ground surveys are vital to our understanding of ECM biology, ecology and community dynamics. In this article I review the recent findings regarding how ECM communities vary both spatially and temporally in forests. Spatial variation occurs at the centimetre scale both horizontally and vertically in forests, and can be explained by the separation of the ECM community into distinct niches. Temporal variation occurs over relatively short time scales, with ECM communities showing large changes even on a monthly basis. I then apply the niche concept to ECM fungi, and review a recent theory, ECM functional morphology, and examine how this may be used to explain a significant amount of spatial and temporal variation in forest ECM communities. The functional morphology theory is particularly useful in explaining patterns of ECM community variation across the distinct successional stages of the forest cycle. However, the effect of other abiotic and biological variables on ECM communities should not be ignored. Finally, as ECM communities are non-randomly distributed R. O’Hanlon (*) World Forestry Centre, 4033 SW Canyon road, Portland, OR 97221, USA e-mail: [email protected] and vary widely in species richness over time, I lay out a sampling strategy to provide representative samples of the actual ECM community in the study area. Using (i) an extensive sampling methodology, (ii) separation of samples at distances greater than levels of spatial autocorrelation, and (iii) samples collected throughout the year, over a number of years, an ample picture of the ECM community in temperate forests can be collected. Keywords Ectomycorrhizas . Sporocarps . Functional morphology . Spatiotemporal variation . Niche separation . Successional patterns . Phylogenetically defined niche 1 Ectomycorrhizal communities: a diverse and important component of forests Mycorrhizal associations were key to the colonisation of terrestrial habitats by plants (Brundrett 2002). Indeed up to 85 % of angiosperm and 90 % of gymnosperm species show mycorrhizal associations (Wang and Qiu 2006). One group of mycorrhizal associations, the ectomycorrhizas, are particularly important to their hosts in boreal and temperate forest ecosystems where competition for available nutrients is very high (Read and Perez-Moreno 2003; Smith and Read 2008). Ectomycorrhizal (ECM) fungi form a sheathing structure around the roots of plants, which also penetrates between plant root cells, called a Hartig net. The presence of a Hartig net distinguishes ECM fungi from saprotrophic fungi present on plant roots (Brundrett 2007). Here after, any reference to below-ground ECM fungi refers to these sheathing structures, and not to below-ground fruiting hypogeous (truffle) fungi. A large number of ECM fungi also produce aboveground structures, in the form of sporocarps to disseminate their spores; hereafter referred to above-ground ECM fungi. ECM fungi are known to be able to acquire nutrients for their hosts from a wide range of sources including 58 decomposing litter (Leake and Read 1997), pollen (PerezMoreno and Read 2001a), saprotrophic fungi (Lindahl et al. 1999), from soil fauna such as springtails (Klironomos and Hart 2001) and nematodes (Perez-Moreno and Read 2001b), and from stone particles in the soil (van Schöll et al. 2008). In temperate and boreal forests, below-ground ECM fungi colonize more than 90 % of the fine roots of trees (Teste et al. 2009; Ma et al. 2010; Pickles et al. 2010; Leski and Rudawska 2012). In some forests below-ground ECM species richness has been found to be very high (Table 1), often numbering hundreds of species per ca. 5,000 m2 forested area (Richard et al. 2005; Tedersoo et al. 2006) and even hundreds per individual tree in certain old-growth forests (Bahram et al. 2011). However, examples of below-ground species poor ECM communities are known from certain forest types, such as ancient bristlecone pine Pinus longaeva Bailey forests in California (Bidartondo et al. 2001) and some tropical forests (see Tedersoo and Nara 2010). The abundance of individuals within these below-ground communities typically follow the log-normal distribution (Horton and Bruns 2001; Kranabetter 2004; Luoma et al. 2006; Cline et al. 2005; Courty et al. 2008; O’Hanlon and Harrington 2012a) with a few taxa being dominant and the majority of taxa being present at low frequencies. A number of factors have been suggested to account for this large species richness (see Kernaghan 2005), including host specificity (Ishida et al. 2007; Lang et al. 2011), forest age (Twieg et al. 2007; Ma et al. 2010), soil edaphic factors (Kranabetter et al. 2009), disturbance regimes (Dickie et al. 2009; Diedhiou et al. 2009) and climatic variables (O’Dell et al. 1999; Querejeta et al. 2009). From a host centric viewpoint, the necessity of supporting such a diverse community of ECM fungi is questionable, as each ECM fungus feeds off the host’s photosynthate (up to 20 % net productivity; Hobbie 2006). However, recent research by Corrêa et al. (2012) has indicated that the photosynthate supplied by the host to the ECM community may be in excess, or produced directly in response to the need for increased root growth, and thus at no net cost to the host growth. Others have questioned if ECM symbiosis should always be classed as a mutualistic association: as it is known that ECM species can occupy different positions along the mutualismparasitism (Jones and Smith 2004) or biotrophysaprotrophy continuum (Koide et al. 2008). A recent and ecologically sound hypothesis has come from girdling experiments in Germany, and states that a high species richness of ECM symbionts may provide insurance to the host in case environmental conditions change and the most dominant ECM fungus is no longer capable of supplying the host with necessary nutrients (Druebert et al. 2009; Pena et al. 2010). This insurance hypothesis is analogous to the functional redundancy hypothesis often cited in biodiversity and ecosystem functioning research (see Bolger 2001 for R. O’Hanlon review), where high biodiversity (of ECM fungi) allows for healthy functioning in the face of environmental perturbations. 2 Aims of this article In this article I will focus on the causes of spatial and temporal variation in below-ground ECM communities, and also how this variation affects the realized ECM communities. The sampling methods applied to above-ground (sporocarp) and below-ground (root tip) ECM communities are also briefly reviewed. The majority of examples used come from boreal and temperate forests, a reflection of the fact that this has been the focus of most ECM research (Dickie and Moyerson 2008; Tedersoo and Nara 2010). I will apply the niche concept to ECM communities, through a combination of two relatively new hypotheses to be applied to ECM fungi—the phylogenetically defined niche and the functional morphology hypothesis. When dealing with the spatial positioning of samples, I will explain the main factors understood to cause the structuring of ECM communities in terms of horizontal variation (distance from tree base) and vertical variation (position in the soil profile). In terms of temporal variation, I will focus only on the short term (from months to 1–3 years) effect of time on ECM communities. I will not deal with the effect of long term variation in ECM communities, as this would introduce many confounding factors (e.g. effect of succession and climate) and is outside of the scope of this article. A final purpose of this article is to provide some guidelines regarding when and where ECM communities should be sampled, so that the best possible representative sample of the actual ECM community can be collected. It will not deal with other aspects of ECM investigation, which are aptly dealt with in Brundrett (2009). 3 Sampling methods applied to ECM communities We can define a community as comprising all organisms that live together at the same place and same time. The community concept can be further broken down to include a particular subset of individuals, such as only the ECM fungi. In order to assess the population structure of the community we need a method of defining the abundances of the individuals (measured at the interspecific or intraspecific level; see Douhan et al. 2011) within the community. The application of the community concept to ECM fungi has been reviewed recently (Koide et al. 2011) and will not be dealt with here. Much of the current knowledge of ECM community ecology to date has been gained by the use of either above-ground or below-ground ECM fungi in forests. Spatial and temporal variation in ectomycorrhizal communities 59 Table 1 Selection of below-ground ectomycorrhizal studies in boreal and temperate forests along with details of the sampling intensity carried out Country Forest type ECM richness Number of samples (sample volume cm3) Root tips counted Reference Canada Canada Canada England Estonia Estonia Germany Iran TC TC TC TC TD TD TC TC 69 26 65 13 14 172 23 160 120 (294) Whole trees (N/a) Whole trees (N/a) 40 (191) Not given (113) 90 (4500) Whole roots (N/a) 7 (2250) 17500 35410 8858 118000 20401 27015 38219 863 Goodman and Trofymow 1998 Durall et al. 1999 Robertson et al. 2006 Palfner et al. 2005 Püttsepp et al. 2004 Tedersoo et al. 2006 kaldorf et al. 2004 Bahram et al. 2012 Italy Japan Lithuania Lithuania New Zealand Poland Scotland Scotland Sweden Sweden Sweden USA USA USA TC TC TC TC TC TC TC TC BC BC BC TC TB TC 31 37 33 14 19 17 13 24 135 37 39 42 140 17 32 (15000) Whole roots (N/a) Whole trees (N/a) 60 (1571) 84 (785) Whole trees (N/a) 30 (126) 217 (98) 120 (92) 30 (92) Whole roots (N/a) Whole roots (N/a) 64 (900) 17 (Variable) 3947 3493 14364 15000 31520 9600 19170 92000 10484 5371 8275 4500 6400 9994 Scattolin et al. 2008 Matsuda and Hijii 2004 Menkis et al. 2005 Aučina et al. 2011 Walbert et al. 2010 Rudawska et al. 2006 Flynn et al. 1998 Pickles et al. 2010 Jonsson et al. 1999 Taylor 2002 Rosling et al. 2003 Lilleskov et al. 2002 Morris et al. 2008 Wurzburger et al. 2004 Forest types: TC Temperate coniferous; TD Temperate deciduous; BC Boreal coniferous. N/a studies where sample volume was not measured A number of studies have compared the two methods, with the majority discovering that they reveal largely dissimilar findings for species richness and community structure (Gardes and Bruns 1996; Dahlberg et al. 1997; Peter et al. 2001; Horton and Bruns 2001; Richard et al. 2005; Porter et al. 2008; Trocha et al. 2011; O’Hanlon and Harrington 2012a; van der Linde et al. 2012). The ecological significance of counts of above-ground sporocarps as a measure of abundance is debatable, as sporocarps are highly ephemeral (Richardson 1970) and exhibit unpredictable fruiting patterns (Straatsma et al. 2001; Harrington 2003; Martínez de Aragón et al. 2007). This being said, Tóth and Barta (2010) encourage the continuation of above-ground sporocarp sampling studies as they are suitable for identifying ECM species responses to environmental change over wide spatial and temporal ranges. The question of how to assess belowground ECM species abundance is even more problematic, as below-ground species are concealed, difficult to identify morphologically, and their biomass is not as easily estimated as with above-ground sporocarps. Below-ground ECM fungi also differ widely in their patch sizes (Genney et al. 2006; Pickles et al. 2010), even between members of the same genus (Kretzer et al. 2005), therefore sampling scale is of vital importance if a true representative of the ECM community is to be attained from soil samples (Horton and Bruns 2001; Taylor 2002). In many previous studies, researchers have used counts of below-ground ECM root tips as a measure of ECM species abundance. Following the advice of Taylor (2002), researchers have generally counted within the region of several thousand tips (Table 1). However, others have questioned the use of root tips as an abundance measure (Dickie et al. 2009)—because it is incorrect to treat each root tip as an individual, and also because of difficulties in the counting of ECM species that form clumped or multi-branched ECM tips (e.g. many Pinus sylvestris L. mycorrhizas; O’Hanlon and Harrington 2012a; O’Hanlon unpublished results). Thus a number of studies have used the frequency of occurrence of below-ground ECM root across a number of samples (soil cores; Koide et al. 2011) or within samples using randomly selected soil core sections (Eberhart et al. 1996) as the method for defining species abundance in below-ground ECM communities. An important, yet oft unconsidered component of belowground ECM communities is the extramatrical mycelium (EMM) (Read 1992; Leake et al. 2004; Cairney 2005; 60 Wallander 2006; Anderson and Cairney 2007; Finlay 2008). A recent review by Cairney (2012) investigated the role of EMM in the carbon cycle of soils, and highlighted that EMM is a vast store of carbon in forest soils, a store which will likely be strongly affected by climate change, thus identifying EMM responses to climate change as a key future research area. The EMM in forest soil can be measured directly from soil samples (Koide et al. 2005; Genney et al. 2006), or it can be baited using substrate filled root restricting mesh bags buried in the soil (Kjøller 2006; Wallander et al. 2010; Kjøller et al. 2012; Walker et al. 2012). The use of molecular methods then allows for the taxonomic identification of the EMM, which is unidentifiable to species level using morphological methods alone (Agerer 2006). Results from studies comparing belowground ECM roots and the EMM have found that these two methods provide contrasting views of the mycorrhizal communities, thus examination of both the ECM community and its EMM is recommended (Koide et al. 2005; Genney et al. 2006; Kjøller 2006). Within below-ground ECM examinations it is common that studies use a combination of morphological and molecular identification methods for taxa identification (Rosling et al. 2003; Kaldorf et al. 2004; Menkis et al. 2005; Parádi and Baar 2006; Buée et al. 2007; Gebhardt et al. 2007; Ma et al. 2010; Walbert et al. 2010; Aučina et al. 2011; O’Hanlon and Harrington 2012a). Sakakibara et al. (2002) found that preliminary sorting of ectomycorrhizas by morphotyping followed by molecular identification allowed for the effective use of research time and funds. The techniques and important characteristics for morphotyping ECM roots are now well established (Agerer 1987–2002; 2006; Ingleby et al. 1990; Goodman et al. 1997), however, morphotyping alone has been shown to fail at distinguishing between certain morphologically similar ECM species (see Sakakibara et al. 2002 and references therein). The use and suitability of molecular biology identification methods for ECM fungi has increased in recent years (see Douhan et al. 2011 and references therein). However, before the application of molecular methods to ECM studies, many ECM types could not be matched to morphological descriptions of ECM taxa and so were often lumped into tenuous groupings which revealed little about ECM ecology, leading to investigators terming these unidentified ECM types the “black-box” (Allen 1991). Modern studies often have identification rates of >90 % of taxa to species level (e.g. Courty et al. 2008; Tedersoo et al. 2008) using morphological and molecular identification methods. The most popular molecular identification methods applied to ECM communities have been reviewed relatively recently (Bidartondo and Gardes 2005; Anderson and Cairney 2004; Martin 2007) and so will not be addressed in this article. A recent advance in molecular biology has been the application of next R. O’Hanlon generation sequencing technologies such as pyrosequencing (“sequencing by synthesis”) to ECM communities. Recent studies to use pyrosequencing on fungal communities are reviewed in Hibbett et al. (2011), and studies often find much greater species richness of OTUs (Operational Taxonomic Units) than expected; such as the ECM dominated 470 OTU found by Blaalid et al. (2012) looking at soil fungi found along a successional gradient near a retreating glacier, or the unexpectedly high number (89 OTU) of ECM fungi in a highly disturbed forest in British Columbia (Walker et al. 2012). The pyrosequencing method and analysis of its results, however, have some intrinsic faults. These including biases related to the treatment of rare OTUs, the use of read abundance as a measure of species abundance, and the relatively short read sequences attained causing concern among some ECM community researchers (Amend et al. 2010; Dickie 2010; Tedersoo et al. 2010a). However, all of the advances in morphological and molecular methods to identify ECM fungi count for little if the roots examined do not provide a good representative sample of the total ECM community. Sampling schemes lacking sufficient replication do not take into account the environmental heterogeneity evident in the rhizosphere, thus biased samples gives a biased description of the community, even when using the most advanced identification methods. To paraphrase Prosser (2010), “even the most powerful techniques become powerless if used in a poorly designed experiment”. ECM communities have been shown to be nonrandomly distributed (Bruns 1995; Tedersoo et al. 2003; 2008), most likely related to distinct niche preferences within the ECM community (Horton and Bruns 2001; Dickie et al. 2002; Taylor 2002; Buée et al. 2007; Tedersoo et al. 2008). Thus, in such a heterogeneous environment, the realised ECM community is strongly dependent on the sampling scheme utilized (Taylor 2002; Lilleskov et al. 2004). It is this aspect—the positioning of samples in space and time which I will examine further. 4 Niche preferences in ECM communities Before going into details about the exact variation found in the below-ground ECM communities across space and time, it may be enlightening to briefly investigate the niche effect and its consequences for the ECM community. In ecology, a niche is generally defined as set of biotic and abiotic conditions under which a species can persist (also known as the Hutchinsonian niche; see Holt 2009). In ECM communities, the biotic conditions can include root presence, species competition, species reproductive patterns; while the abiotic conditions include, for example, soil edaphic factors, climate and land use history. Spatial autocorrelation patterns have been found along horizontal and vertical transects in Spatial and temporal variation in ectomycorrhizal communities forest soil (Lilleskov et al. 2004; Izzo et al. 2005; Genney et al. 2006)—with ECM communities of temperate forests often displaying high autocorrelation in the region of 1 to 4 meters (Peter et al. 2001; Lilleskov et al. 2004; Genney et al. 2006; Pickles et al. 2010; Bahram et al. 2011). These values are much lower than those found for ECM communities in Tropical forests (>8 meters; Tedersoo et al. 2010b), which the authors hypothesize was due to the much lower ECM species richness per sample in these tropical versus temperate forests. Methods for testing for spatial autocorrelation and designing sampling methods to reduce its effect are dealt with later in the review. As early as Darwin, it was noticed that species with shared ancestry had high phenotypic similarity (CavenderBares et al. 2009). This later became an area of intense study in evolutionary ecology, and is now referred to as the phylogenetically defined niche concept. The phlyogenetically defined niche concept was developed using macroorganisms as the model (Cavender-Bares et al. 2009; Vamosi et al. 2009) and has been highlighted as a useful hypothesis in explaining significant amounts of the variation in species distributions (Wiens et al. 2010), including in ECM communities (Parrent et al. 2010; Jumpponen et al. 2012). It states that closely related taxa (e.g. within the same genus) often occupy similar niches, possibly due to a number of factors—such as similar dispersal habits, sharing preferences for specific nutrient sources, and/or susceptibility to the same consumers, pathogens or parasites. The phylogenetically defined niche hypothesis has recently been tested with fungi, specifically arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi (Maherali and Klironomos 2007, 2012; Powell et al. 2009), and it has been found that phylogenetically closely related species often compete for similar niches due to variation in colonization strategies. There are numerous examples of ECM taxa which display a distinct niche preference—such as the order Thelephorales with coarse woody debris (Tedersoo et al. 2003), members of the genus Tomentella for the A1 soil horizon (Visser 1995; Courty et al. 2008), Russula spp. dominance in fertile clay soils (Peay et al. 2010a) and the preference of some Lactarius species for either the organic or mineral soil horizons (Geml et al. 2009), to name just a few. As ECM fungi are symbiotic organisms, it can be stated that the presence of host roots is the main factor delineating ECM distributions. Indeed, as roots are the habitat for all ECM fungi, root density may explain many of the community and successional patterns in ECM assemblages (Newton 1992; Peay et al. 2011). As ECM fungi are obligate symbionts, they cannot complete their life cycle under natural conditions in the absence of carbohydrates supplied by a plant host (Högberg et al. 2001; Taylor and Alexander 2005). Therefore ECM communities are confined to areas with host roots available, but roots can often reach many 61 meters from individual trees (Saari et al. 2005) so care must be taken in densely stocked forests. The presence of some ECM species many meters from possible host trees (Taylor and Alexander 2005) and the proven ability in-vitro of several ECM species to acquire carbon directly from organic matter when tree host carbon supply is limited (Buée et al. 2005; Courty et al. 2007; Cullings et al. 2008; Vaario et al. 2012), has led to the hypothesis that not all ECM species are obligate symbionts and some exist as facultative saprotrophs (Talbot et al. 2008). However, Baldrian (2009) refutes this claim, providing another hypothesis to account for the increased enzymatic activities of ECM fungi under host carbon limited conditions. He states that the increased activity could be part of an autolytic process to allow for the fungus to escape from the dying root and find a new host. In a reply to this, Cullings and Courty (2009) highlight that ECM fungi respond to litter addition by increasing EMM growth into the litter, which the authors believe was used as a nutrient source by the ECM fungi. They also point out that many ECM species express the genes and produce the enzymes necessary to utilize litter as a nutrient source; which coupled with the fact that there are numerous examples of ECM taxa reverting back to the saprotrophic lifestyle (Hibbett et al. 2000) indicates that ECM fungi may exist somewhere along the biotrophy-saprotrophy continuum (Koide et al. 2008). The continued host supply of carbohydrates to the fungus is very important in the further spreading and colonization of new roots by ECM fungi (Högberg et al. 2001). Uncolonized sapling baiting experiments and post-harvest root assessments in numerous forest types have highlighted that areas in close proximity to existing ECM tree roots have higher ECM infection rates and more diverse ECM communities (Kranabetter and Wylie 1998; Hagerman et al. 1999; Kranabetter and Friesen 2002; Outerbridge and Trofymow 2004; Cline et al. 2005; Luoma et al. 2006; Jones et al. 2008; Teste et al. 2009). Luoma et al. (2006) examined the spatial influence of retained mature trees in Oregonian Douglas fir forests. They found that ECM richness exhibited a 50 % decline when they took their sample at distances of greater than 8 meters from the tree. This decline of ECM species richness as they sampled further away from the tree was found to be related to the decline in root density at increasing distances. Although fungal spores are mass produced (105 spores per m−2; Dahlberg and Stenlid 1994), very small and well suited to long distance dispersal; conventional wisdom says that most of the spores fall close to their source of origin. Li (2005) found that few spores (<5 %) of basidiomycete Amanita muscaria Lam. escaped more than 5 meters from their sporocarp origin, while Galante et al. (2011) used a field based and statistical modelling approach to predict that only 5 % of basidiospores fall further than 1 meter of the sporocarp origin. Moreover, 62 ECM population genetics has found that the spores of many ECM species experience dispersal limitations at landscape and continental scales (Bergemann and Miller 2002; Kretzer et al. 2004; Douhan and Rizzo 2005; Taylor et al. 2006; Grubisha et al. 2007; Carriconde et al. 2008; Geml et al. 2008; Douhan et al. 2011). In a seminal ECM community ecology paper by Peay et al. (2007) examining ECM communities on different sized “tree islands” in single tree species even aged pine forests in California, ECM fungal species richness decreased as distance from nearest inoculum source increased. Thus showing that for ECM fungi, “everything is not everywhere” and ECM fungi, unlike many other micro-organisms (Finlay 2002), are geographically restricted. Indeed, a follow up study in the same area but on older trees showed that ECM species richness was approximately 50 % lower at 1,000 m from the forest than at the forest edge (Peay et al. 2010b). 5 Horizontal and vertical variation in ectomycorrhizal communities Along the horizontal plane, studies have shown that belowground ECM communities show large amounts of variation, i.e. with communities differing along a transect from the trunk of the tree (Dickie and Reich 2005; Dickie et al. 2005; Gebhardt et al. 2007; Pickles et al. 2010; Bahram et al. 2011). The most recent of these studies was carried out in old-growth mixed aspen forests in Estonia (Bahram et al. 2011) and found that ECM species richness showed a stochastic pattern, not directly related to distance from the tree base. Community structure however, was found to be structured and non-stochastic, a finding which the authors believe is due to certain groups of species having phylogenetically defined niches. Further support for this explanation comes from the fact that levels of spatial autocorrelation were weaker when samples were analysed at the species level, with strong spatial autocorrelation was present at the lineage level. Greater spatial autocorrelation at the ECM lineage level compared with species level suggests that species within lineages have a clumped distribution due to biotic and/or abiotic factors. Work by University of Minnesota researchers in bur oak Quercus macrocarpa Michx. forests investigated the effect of forest edges on ECM communities (Dickie and Reich 2005; Dickie et al. 2005). Their work highlighted the fact that the ECM community of trees was most diverse in the soil close to the tree where high root density allows for high ECM abundance. ECM communities also show vertical variation in the soil profile (Dickie et al. 2002; Landeweert et al. 2003; Rosling et al. 2003; Genney et al. 2006; Baier et al. 2006; Lindahl et al. 2007; Courty et al. 2008; Scattolin et al. 2008). Rosling et al. (2003) used morphotyping and DNA sequencing to R. O’Hanlon examine the vertical distribution of ECM types in a podzol soil from a spruce and pine forest in Sweden. They found that more than half of the ECM taxa were restricted to the mineral soil horizons, thus indicating the importance of including the mineral soil layers in future sampling schemes. Genney et al. (2006) used a novel method to examine the fine scale distribution of ECM tips and ECM mycelium in the soil profile of a Scot’s pine forest in Scotland. They took slices of the soil profile and divided this into small cubes of soil. They were then able to map (at the centimetre scale) the distribution of the different ECM species and identify preferences for some ECM species to certain positions in the soil profile, indicating niche preferences in their ECM community. The effect of niche preferences and how they structure the ECM community have been described using both (i) abiotic and (ii) biotic factors (Jumpponen and Egerton-Warburton 2005). Under (i) abiotic factors, studies have found that certain ECM taxa have distinct preferences for soil moisture content (Agerer 2006), pH (Grebenc et al. 2009; Ishida et al. 2009), nitrogen (Lilleskov et al. 2002; Kranabetter et al. 2009), phosphorus (Harrington and Mitchell 2005a; Twieg et al. 2009; Cairney 2011), zinc (Colpaert et al. 2005) and others (Erland and Taylor 2002). (ii) Biotic factors include tree species identity (Ishida et al. 2007; Tedersoo et al. 2008; O’Hanlon and Harrington 2012a), interspecific ECM competition (Kennedy 2010), presence of helper bacteria (Tedersoo et al. 2009) and arthropod grazing (Schneider et al. 2005). 6 Temporal variation in ectomycorrhizal communities across short timescales Temporal variation has been recognised in above-ground ECM sporocarp studies. Many species have distinct fruiting times, for example Hebeloma sinapizans (Paulet ex Fr.) Gill is known to sporulate early in the season (Martínez de Aragón et al. 2007) whilst Hygrophorus hypothejus Fries. fruits very late in the foray season (Phillips 2006). Some species fruit yearly Russula ochroleuca (Pers.) Fr. (Straatsma et al. 2001) whilst some Cortinarius camphoratus Fr.; (Martínez de Aragón et al. 2007) fruit only sporadically. Parallel to this, it has been recognised that some ECM species are easily cultured in-vitro from spores, whilst others are extremely difficult to culture from spore based medium (Trape 1977). Species such as Laccaria spp. (Gherbi et al. 1999) and Hebeloma spp. (Guidot et al. 2001) have high spore germination rates and also produce many sporocarps. Also, these species are frequently found in disturbed or early successional habitats (Dighton et al. 1986; Jumpponen et al. 1999, 2012; Nara et al. 2003a, b). Incidentally, recent genetic work has shown that for some ECM genera, for example the genus Laccaria, no clear species delineation is Spatial and temporal variation in ectomycorrhizal communities currently available (Douhan et al. 2011). Also, the species Laccaria amethystina Cooke contains many morphospecies (species based on sporocarp morphology) across Europe (Vincenot et al. 2011), and associates with many different host trees (Roy et al. 2008); a factor which some believe leads to higher intra-specific variation due to allochronous speciation (Dickie et al. 2010). Thus a future focus of ECM population genetics should be in clearing up issues regarding ECM species delineation levels, so that the importance of intra-specific diversity in ECM communities can be further examined (Johnson et al. 2012). In contrast to this, species that are difficult to culture from spores and infrequently produce sporocarps e.g. Russula brevipes Peck (Bergemann and Miller 2002) and Tricholoma matsutake Singer (Amend et al. 2009) are often more common as ECM fungi in undisturbed habitats. This has led researchers to postulate that ECM species often focus their resources into either spore based or mycelia based methods of colonization (Newton 1992; Ishida et al. 2008). Termed the “trade-off in species’ life histories” mechanism, Kennedy (2010) reviews this hypothesis and comes to the conclusion that whilst it may explain a noteworthy amount about ECM distributions, other factors listed by Bruns (1995), such as resource partitioning, ECM fungus host specificity and abiotic preferences of some ECM fungi are also important. The well known ephemerality of fungal sporocarps (Watling 1995; Straatsma et al. 2001) is to some extent mirrored in the below-ground ECM communities. Studies of below-ground ECM communities over multiple sampling occasions have shown that the ECM communities are not in a static state (Guidot et al. 2004; Harrington and Mitchell 2005b; Izzo et al. 2005; Koide et al. 2007; Courty et al. 2008; Pickles et al. 2010). Of the previously mentioned temporal studies, the long term study (3 years) of Izzo et al. (2005) examined the effect of spatiotemporal variation on the below-ground ECM community of fir forests in California. They found that at large spatial scales the dominant species occurred every year whereas at small spatial scales dominant species were sometimes completely replaced. Similarly, albeit using a more restrictive sampling protocol, Guidot et al. (2004) found that their target belowground ECM fungus, Hebeloma cylindrosporum Romag., was frequently eliminated from, and reintroduced to the ECM community over a three year study carried out in of Pinus pinaster Aiton forests in France. Over a 2 year study in Scottish Scots pine forests, Pickles et al. (2010) found that some Cortinarius species (called Cortinarius complex) reappeared in a similar position on both years, while Tomentellopsis submollis (Svrcek) Hjortstam displayed the opposite pattern appearing in a different location in each year. However, for the most part the authors noted no significant correlation (positive or negative) between the positions of most ECM species over the study period. 63 Studies examining ECM community temporal variation over shorter scales (ca. 1 year) cannot be said to fully capture the seasonal variation of the ECM community. While longer term studies (over several years) run the risk of introducing confounding factors such as changes in host age and also the chance of immigration of new ECM species into the community. Tree host age has been identified as having a strong influence on the ECM communities using above- (Smith et al. 2002) and below-ground (Palfner et al. 2005; Twieg et al. 2007) ECM studies in the past. In terms of surveying above-ground fungal communities, a general time-frame of 3 years of surveying in normally carried out, although one exceptionally long term study was still finding new species after 21 years (Straatsma et al. 2001). For below-ground communities there has not been a general consensus reached as to the minimal time frame, although studies surveying over 1 year are not common amongst the literature (Tóth and Barta 2010). Ideally, a study sampling the ECM community of a plot every month over 2/3 years would address temporal variations between months while also including sufficient replication of results across years. However, a study of this magnitude is likely to be very time and cost intensive. Of the short term studies to address temporal patterns in ECM communities, the study of Koide et al. (2007) in a plantation pine forest in Pennsylvania, USA examined the ECM communities by sampling every two months over a period of 13 months. They found that taxa richness and community structure varied widely across months, and suggested that meteorological variables and the availability of uncolonized roots might have a strong influence on their findings. Harrington and Mitchell (2005b) also identified meteorological variables as the most likely factor affecting the fluctuations in abundances of many species in the ECM communities of dryas heaths in Ireland over a 14 month sampling period. Similar to the conclusions of Koide et al. (2007), Courty et al. (2008) identified meteorological variation and available root space as significant in explaining ECM community variation in a 14 month study in a French oak forest. The French study also identified a community in which the most abundant species fluctuated vastly between months, with September being the month with the highest species richness. Another interesting finding of this study was that temporal variation was especially evident in the upper soil horizons, possibly due to changes in soil moisture levels through the seasons. 7 Functional morphology: a theory to explain stand level ECM community variations? A recent paper published by researchers associated with the Bruns lab in UC Berkeley, seeks to unite many of the ideas discussed in this article that account for the spatial and 64 R. O’Hanlon temporal variation in ECM communities. Peay et al. (2011) tested and discussed their functional morphology hypothesis with data from forests of Bishops pine Pinus muricata D. Don in California. They described how three zones exist in forest soils with regard to root densities and forest succession (Fig. 1). In the spore competitive phase, species that spread primarily by spores are dominant on the roots, such as in early successional forests or afforested landscapes. The next stage, termed the early mycelia competitive phase, less abundant less reactive spores establish at low frequency and vegetative competition ensues. In the ultimate phase, the zoned competitive phase, root density explains a large portion of the community structure, with high density root zones dominated by short-range exploration morphotypes and lower density root areas dominated by long-range exploration types. There are many examples of ECM species distributions which corroborate with the functional morphology theory: such as (i) the abundance of Laccaria spp. (Fig. 1a, b), Inocybe spp. (Fig. 1c, d) and Hebeloma spp. in both above- (Deacon and Fleming 1992; Nara et al. 2003b; Jumpponen et al. 2012) and below-ground (Nara et al. 2003a) ECM communities in recently established forests, (ii) the abundance of sporocarps and medium range exploration types of Cortinarius spp. (Fig. 1e, f) in old growth (sparsely stocked) forests (Peter et al. 2001; Smith et al. 2002) and (iii) the abundance of Russula spp. (Fig. 1g, h) sporocarps and contact exploration type ectomycorrhizas in mature forests with high root densities (Kranabetter et al. 2005; Twieg et al. 2007; O’Hanlon and Harrington 2012a, b). Thus, the functional morphology hypothesis unites many theories from previous ECM research—including effects of forest successional stages on ECM communities, ECM exploration types and colonization-competition theories. However, this theory is relatively new, and has had little time to be tested using data from other forest habitats, although some contemporary studies have acknowledged its worth (Kennedy et al. 2011; Hobbie et al. 2012; O’Hanlon and Harrington 2012a; Velmala et al. 2012). Peay and colleagues propose that the functional morphology hypothesis will be most useful for explaining the variation in ECM communities across the early successional stages of forests, as this is when the greatest changes in root density occur. They also recognize that leaf litter quality, soil edaphic qualities and the host tree identity are also likely to be important factors explaining variation in ECM communities. Fig. 1 Some applicable ectomycorrhizal species (above-ground and below-ground structures; vertical axis) and the phase (horizontal axis) in the functional morphology hypothesis (Peay et al. 2011) which they fit into. The species are (a) Laccaria amethystina sporocarps and (b) ectomycorrhizas; (c) Inocybe spp. sporocarps and (d) ectomycorrhizas; (e) Cortinarius spp. sporocarps and (f) ectomycorrhizas; (g) Russula ochroleuca sporocarps and (h) ectomycorrhizas 8 Guidelines for sampling ECM communities Spatial and temporal variation is widely recognised in ECM communities. ECM communities are structured by numerous factors, including tree species present, edaphic factors, substrate preferences, ecosystem disturbance, competition, and root density. The combined effects of these factors appear to cause the non-random distributions seen in many species of ECM fungi. This article has focussed on what previous research has revealed about small scale spatial and temporal variation on below-ground ECM communities. I Spatial and temporal variation in ectomycorrhizal communities will now propose some sampling guidelines which if followed, will allow for the collection of root samples which give the best representation of the actual below-ground ECM communities in the forest. To the best of my knowledge, guidelines dealing with the below-ground sampling of ECM communities in temperate forests have not been proposed, while best practices for sampling epigeous and hypogeous fungal communities have been described several times (Orton 1987; Vogt et al. 1992; Watling 1995; Mueller et al. 2004; Halme et al. 2012). Firstly, extensive sampling (few roots from many samples) is better than intensive sampling (many roots from few samples) for revealing ECM species richness and actual community structure (Gehring et al. 1998; Horton and Bruns 2001; Peter et al. 2001; Taylor 2002; Nara et al. 2003a; Tedersoo et al. 2003; Kaldorf et al. 2004; Menkis et al. 2005; Martin 2007). It follows that a trade-off is needed in sample size (i.e. core size), so that the sorting and analysis of the below-ground morhotypes does not become unmanageable. Thus sample sizes smaller than 100 cm3, as used in a number of studies (Taylor 2002; Parádi and Baar 2006; Pickles et al. 2010), are more manageable than those of larger volume; especially in areas of high root abundance, such as in densely stocked forests. If large soil samples are used, then a random selection of roots from within this sample (see Eberhart et al. 1996) can be taken and analysed to provide a realistic picture of the below-ground ECM community (Nara et al. 2003a; Tedersoo et al. 2003). These samples (e.g. cores) should then be randomly dispersed (incorporating sufficient separation between samples to remove effect of spatial autocorrelation; see below) throughout all plots, as this provides the study with sufficient replication within and between plots. For example, O’Hanlon and Harrington (2012a) examined the ECM communities of three forest types (oak, Scots pine and Sitka spruce) in Ireland. They sampled the ECM communities of four plots of each forest type, and collected five samples from each plot. Thus, they had replication present for between- and within-plot comparisons. The use of replication is vital to allow for the environmental heterogeneity typically seem in natural ecosystems. However, it has recently been pointed out that many studies using “cutting edge” molecular technologies (i.e. pyrosequencing) for describing microbial communities lack sufficient replication, and thus have little “real world” scientific meaning (Prosser 2010). Second, in an effort to minimize the effect of spatial autocorrelation, and thus pseudo-replication, the samples should be spaced further apart than the known levels of spatial autocorrelation in the examined forest. If no data exists for levels of spatial autocorrelation in the forest type in question—then using the data from previous research into the ECM communities of temperate forests as a guide, spacing samples at least 4 m apart will reduce the effects 65 of spatial autocorrelation between samples. During the analysis of results, tests for spatial autocorrelation, using a Mantel correlogram should be applied. In a Mantel correlogram, a Mantel correlation is computed between a multivariate distance matrix and a matrix of geographic separation between the samples. The multivariate distance matrix can use numerous distance measures (e.g. Jaccard, Sørensen) while the matrix of physical distances can represent actual physical distances between samples or the geographic coordinates of the samples (i.e. X and Y values). However, previous research has shown that using the physical distances between samples is preferable to using XY coordinates, as physical distances include variation such as surface slope, while XY coordinates assume that the samples are on the same plane in calculating distance between samples (Urban et al. 2002). The Mantel statistic is evaluated through a permutational Mantel test and progressive correction tests (e.g. Bonferroni) to correct for multiple testing (Legendre and Legendre 1998). Software for carrying out Mantel correlograms is freely available through the R (R Development Core Team 2011) suite of programs, the packages Vegan (Oksanen et al. 2012) and Ecodist (Goslee and Urban 2007) being two of the most popular packages. Thirdly, where possible, samples should be collected throughout the year, with a particular focus of sampling in autumn. Previous studies have found September to be the most above-ground (Hering 1966) and below-ground (Courty et al. 2008) fungal species rich month in European temperate forests. A study spanning several years and measuring the below-ground ECM community on a regular (monthly) basis would allow for better comparisons with the above-ground ECM community, as differences in sampling periods may be one of the main reasons for disparities between above- and below-ground ECM communities in previous studies (Tóth and Barta 2010; O’Hanlon and Harrington 2012a). Sampling throughout the year will also give an indication of how the ECM community changes over time, and how quickly this change occurs; a key area for future research to address (Taylor 2002; Courty et al. 2010). There have been several studies that sampled multiple years, yet did not sample very frequently throughout the year (Izzo et al. 2005; Pickles et al. 2010). There have also been studies that sampled several times per year, yet did not sample over multiple years (Harrington and Mitchell 2005b; Koide et al. 2007; Courty et al. 2008). Such 2 year, regularly (monthly) sampled studies have been carried out for bacterial communities (Meier et al. 2008), although shorter studies are also more common for soil bacterial communities (Smit et al. 2001; Juottonen et al. 2008). In closing, it is exciting to note the massive developments in the techniques for describing ECM communities that have been made in recent years (Martin 2007; Hibbett et al. 2009; Douhan et al. 2011). 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