Diversity of endophytic fungi in the leaflets and branches of Poincianella pyramidalis, an endemic species of Brazilian tropical dry forest

ABSTRACT Plants harbour diverse communities of fungal species in their internal compartments. Endophytic fungi help their hosts to establish, survive, and adapt to different environments. Here, we examined the diversity of endophytic fungi in the leaflets and branches of Poincianella pyramidalis, a plant species endemic to the Brazilian tropical dry forest (Caatinga). A total of 360 fragments of leaflets and branches were analysed and 189 endophytic fungi were isolated and distributed among 21 ascomycetous genera based on their ITS and LSU rDNA sequences. Diaporthe was the most frequently identified genus, followed by Didymella and Rhytidhysteron. The colonisation rate of plant fragments was higher in the branches (74 %) than in leaflets (14 %). The richness of the genera of endophytic fungi was also higher in the branches than in leaflets, whereas no difference was observed in endophyte diversity between the plant parts, based on Shannon-Wiener and Fisher alpha diversity indices. Our results indicate that endemic plant species from Brazilian dry forest, such as P. pyramidalis, are predominantly colonised by ascomycetous fungi, especially members of the class Dothideomycetes.

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Main Authors: Oliveira,Thays G. L., Bezerra,Jadson D. P., Silva,Iolanda R. da, Souza-Motta,Cristina M., Magalhães,Oliane M. C.
Format: Digital revista
Language:English
Published: Sociedade Botânica do Brasil 2020
Online Access:http://old.scielo.br/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S0102-33062020000400755
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spelling oai:scielo:S0102-330620200004007552021-03-22Diversity of endophytic fungi in the leaflets and branches of Poincianella pyramidalis, an endemic species of Brazilian tropical dry forestOliveira,Thays G. L.Bezerra,Jadson D. P.Silva,Iolanda R. daSouza-Motta,Cristina M.Magalhães,Oliane M. C. Ascomycetous fungi Caatinga Diaporthe Dothideomycetes taxonomy ABSTRACT Plants harbour diverse communities of fungal species in their internal compartments. Endophytic fungi help their hosts to establish, survive, and adapt to different environments. Here, we examined the diversity of endophytic fungi in the leaflets and branches of Poincianella pyramidalis, a plant species endemic to the Brazilian tropical dry forest (Caatinga). A total of 360 fragments of leaflets and branches were analysed and 189 endophytic fungi were isolated and distributed among 21 ascomycetous genera based on their ITS and LSU rDNA sequences. Diaporthe was the most frequently identified genus, followed by Didymella and Rhytidhysteron. The colonisation rate of plant fragments was higher in the branches (74 %) than in leaflets (14 %). The richness of the genera of endophytic fungi was also higher in the branches than in leaflets, whereas no difference was observed in endophyte diversity between the plant parts, based on Shannon-Wiener and Fisher alpha diversity indices. Our results indicate that endemic plant species from Brazilian dry forest, such as P. pyramidalis, are predominantly colonised by ascomycetous fungi, especially members of the class Dothideomycetes.info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccessSociedade Botânica do BrasilActa Botanica Brasilica v.34 n.4 20202020-12-01info:eu-repo/semantics/articletext/htmlhttp://old.scielo.br/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S0102-33062020000400755en10.1590/0102-33062020abb0253
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country Brasil
countrycode BR
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databasecode rev-scielo-br
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libraryname SciELO
language English
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author Oliveira,Thays G. L.
Bezerra,Jadson D. P.
Silva,Iolanda R. da
Souza-Motta,Cristina M.
Magalhães,Oliane M. C.
spellingShingle Oliveira,Thays G. L.
Bezerra,Jadson D. P.
Silva,Iolanda R. da
Souza-Motta,Cristina M.
Magalhães,Oliane M. C.
Diversity of endophytic fungi in the leaflets and branches of Poincianella pyramidalis, an endemic species of Brazilian tropical dry forest
author_facet Oliveira,Thays G. L.
Bezerra,Jadson D. P.
Silva,Iolanda R. da
Souza-Motta,Cristina M.
Magalhães,Oliane M. C.
author_sort Oliveira,Thays G. L.
title Diversity of endophytic fungi in the leaflets and branches of Poincianella pyramidalis, an endemic species of Brazilian tropical dry forest
title_short Diversity of endophytic fungi in the leaflets and branches of Poincianella pyramidalis, an endemic species of Brazilian tropical dry forest
title_full Diversity of endophytic fungi in the leaflets and branches of Poincianella pyramidalis, an endemic species of Brazilian tropical dry forest
title_fullStr Diversity of endophytic fungi in the leaflets and branches of Poincianella pyramidalis, an endemic species of Brazilian tropical dry forest
title_full_unstemmed Diversity of endophytic fungi in the leaflets and branches of Poincianella pyramidalis, an endemic species of Brazilian tropical dry forest
title_sort diversity of endophytic fungi in the leaflets and branches of poincianella pyramidalis, an endemic species of brazilian tropical dry forest
description ABSTRACT Plants harbour diverse communities of fungal species in their internal compartments. Endophytic fungi help their hosts to establish, survive, and adapt to different environments. Here, we examined the diversity of endophytic fungi in the leaflets and branches of Poincianella pyramidalis, a plant species endemic to the Brazilian tropical dry forest (Caatinga). A total of 360 fragments of leaflets and branches were analysed and 189 endophytic fungi were isolated and distributed among 21 ascomycetous genera based on their ITS and LSU rDNA sequences. Diaporthe was the most frequently identified genus, followed by Didymella and Rhytidhysteron. The colonisation rate of plant fragments was higher in the branches (74 %) than in leaflets (14 %). The richness of the genera of endophytic fungi was also higher in the branches than in leaflets, whereas no difference was observed in endophyte diversity between the plant parts, based on Shannon-Wiener and Fisher alpha diversity indices. Our results indicate that endemic plant species from Brazilian dry forest, such as P. pyramidalis, are predominantly colonised by ascomycetous fungi, especially members of the class Dothideomycetes.
publisher Sociedade Botânica do Brasil
publishDate 2020
url http://old.scielo.br/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S0102-33062020000400755
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