Monitoring Fungal Communities With the Global Spore Sampling Project

Title
Monitoring Fungal Communities With the Global Spore Sampling Project
Publication Date
2020-01-14
Author(s)
Ovaskainen, Otso
Abrego, Nerea
Somervuo, Panu
Palorinne, Isabella
Hardwick, Bess
Pitkanen, Juha-Matti
Andrew, Nigel R
( author )
OrcID: https://orcid.org/0000-0002-2850-2307
Email: nandrew@une.edu.au
UNE Id une-id:nandrew
Niklaus, Pascal A
Schmidt, Niels Martin
Seibold, Sebastian
Vogt, Juliane
Zakharov, Evgeny V
Hebert, Paul D N
Roslin, Tomas
Ivanova, Natalia V
Abstract
Raw sequence data were deposited into ENA, accession PRJEB33255 (https://www.ebi.ac.uk/ena/browser/view/PRJEB33255)
Type of document
Journal Article
Language
en
Entity Type
Publication
Publisher
Frontiers Research Foundation
Place of publication
Switzerland
DOI
10.3389/fevo.2019.00511
UNE publication id
une:1959.11/27964
Abstract
The kingdom Fungi is a megadiverse group represented in all ecosystem types. The global diversity and distribution of fungal taxa are poorly known, in part due to the limitations related to traditional fruit-body survey methods. These previous hurdles are now being overcome by rapidly developing DNA-based surveys. Past fungal DNA surveys have predominantly examined soil samples, which capture high species diversity but represent only the local soil community. Recent work has shown that DNA samples collected from the air with cyclone samplers provide information on fungal diversity at the scale of some tens of kilometers around the sampling location. To test the feasibility of air sampling for investigating global patterns of fungal diversity, we established a new initiative called the Global Spore Sampling Project (GSSP). The GSSP currently involves 50 sampling locations distributed on all continents, with each location collecting two 24-h samples per week. Here we describe the GSSP methodology, including the sampling, DNA extraction and sequencing protocols, and the bioinformatics pipeline. We further report results based on 75 pilot samples from five locations, of which three in Europe, one in Australia, and one in Greenland. The results show highly consistent patterns, suggesting that GSSP holds much promise for systematic global fungal monitoring. The GSSP provides highly standardized sampling across space and time, enabling much-improved estimation of total fungal diversity, the global distribution of different fungal groups, fungal fruiting phenology, and the extent of long-distance dispersal in fungi.
Link
Citation
Frontiers in Ecology and Evolution, v.7, p. 1-9
ISSN
2296-701X
Start page
1
End page
9
Rights
Attribution 4.0 International

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