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Aim
Climate change challenges temperate forest trees by increasingly irregular precipitation and rising temperatures. Due to long generation cycles, trees cannot quickly adapt genetically. Hence, the persistence of tree populations in the face of ongoing climate change depends largely on phenotypic variation, that is the capability of a genotype to express variable phenotypes under different environmental conditions, known as plasticity. We aimed to quantify phenotypic variation of central Europe's naturally dominant forest tree across various intraspecific scales (individuals, mother trees (families), populations) to evaluate its potential to respond to changing climatic conditions.
Location
Europe.
Time Period
2016–2019.
Major Taxa Studied
European beech (Fagus sylvatica L.).
Methods
We conducted a fully reciprocal transplantation experiment with more than 9000 beech seeds from seven populations across a Europe-wide gradient. We compared morphological (Specific Leaf Area), phenological (leaf unfolding) and fitness-related (growth, survival) traits across various biological scales: within single mother trees, within populations and across different populations under the contrasting climates of the translocation sites.
Results
The experiment revealed significant phenotypic variation within the offspring of each mother tree, regardless of geographic origin. Initially, seedling height growth varied among mother trees and populations, likely due to maternal effects. However, the growth performance successively aligned after the first year. In summary, we observed a consistent growth response in different beech populations to diverse environments after initial maternal effects.
Main Conclusions
The study strikingly demonstrates the importance of considering intraspecific variation. Given the surprisingly broad spectrum of phenotypes each mother tree holds within its juvenile offspring, we conclude that Fagus sylvatica might have the potential for medium-term population persistence in face of climate change, provided that this pattern persists into later life stages. Hence, we also suggest further investigating the inclusion of passive adaptation and natural dynamics in the adaptive management of forests.
Abstract
Aim
Distribution ranges of temperate tree species are shifting poleward and upslope into cooler environments due to global warming. Successful regeneration is crucial for population persistence and range expansion. Thus, we aimed to identify environmental variables that affect germination and seedling establishment of Europe's dominant forest tree, to compare the importance of plasticity and genetic variation for regeneration, and to evaluate the regeneration potential at and beyond the southern and northern distribution margins.
Location
Europe.
Time period
2016–2018.
Major taxa studied
European beech (Fagus sylvatica (L.)).
Methods
We investigated how germination, establishment and juvenile survival change across a reciprocal transplantation experiment using over 9,000 seeds of beech from 7 populations from its southern to its northern distribution range margins.
Results
Germination and establishment at the seedling stage were highly plastic in response to environmental conditions. Germination success increased with warmer and declined with colder air temperature, whereas establishment and survival were hampered under warmer and drier conditions. Germination differed among populations and was positively influenced by seed weight. However, there was no evidence of local adaptation in any trait.
Main conclusions
The high plasticity in the early life‐history traits found irrespective of seed origin may allow for short‐term acclimatization. However, our results also indicate that this plasticity might not be sufficient to ensure the regeneration of beech in the future due to the low survival found under dry and hot conditions. The future climatic conditions in parts of the distribution centre and at the rear edge might thus become limiting for natural regeneration, as the likelihood of extreme heat and drought events will increase. By contrast, at the cold distribution margin, the high plasticity in the early life‐history traits may allow for increasing germination success with increasing temperatures and may thus facilitate natural regeneration in the future.
Leaf-inhabiting fungi are a hyperdiverse group of microbiota found in all terrestrial habitats. Comparative studies targeting the drivers of endophytic fungal biodiversity are rare and identified multiple effectors, such as plant chemistry, climate and seasonal attributes. Our project aimed to study the pattern of the leaf-associated mycobiome of European beech (Fagus sylvatica) at altitudinally distinct sites to reveal diversity, composition and seasonal dynamics of fungal endophytes by a combination of metabarcoding, cultivation and subsequent ecological analyses. This thesis also intended to study the fungal relationship with biotic and abiotic factors: elevation, local site conditions, leaf biochemistry and leaf status. Metabarcoding and cultivation were applied for same leaf samples to trace both environmental drivers and method-dependent signals of the detected fungi. An experimental field site consisting of 100 (2-years old beech) trees was established called ‘beech phytometer’ system at two altitudes (517 and 975 m a.s.l.) in a German mountain forest. Beech trees were randomly selected from both sites as well as from neighboring beech trees. Ten trees from each site were chosen and 10 leaves per tree were sampled. Climatic and leaf biochemistry (Chlorophyll, flavonoid and nitrogen) data were seasonally (Autumn, Spring and Summer) investigated for two continuous years (Oct 2013 to Oct 2015) at these two elevations. In the first year (autumn, 2013) of the project (chapter 3.1), the leaf-inhabiting fungi of natural beech trees were investigated by using high-throughput sequencing (metabarcoding) at three altitudinally distinct sites (with timberline at 1381 m a.s.l.) in the German Alps. This paper focuses on a detailed description and evaluation of metabarcoding amplicon library preparation and a subsequent analytical workflow. Fungal diversity and community composition were compared as a function of different elevated sites and leaf status (i.e., vital or senescent). However, three investigation sites resulted in 969 OTUs (operational taxonomic units) from 820441 sequences. Taxonomic compositions (order) of beech fungi differed strongly among the three sites but were less distinct between the vital and the senescence leaves. Fungal community composition at valley site clearly differed from those of mountain and timberline where differences between mountain and timberline were less prominent. Vital and senescence leaf differed in fungal community structures indicating a strong dynamics of leaf fungi in autumn. Elevation and leaf status were found to be the main explaining factors, which affected the fungal richness and compositions. Another survey (Chapter 3.2) was conducted just after the establishment of the ‘beech phytometer’ trees in the same period (autumn 2013) where leaf mycobiome of the phytometer trees (trees originally came from Northern Germany and grown in nursery) were compared with the fungi of surrounding natural beech habitat at valley (517 m a.s.l.) and mountain site (975 m a.s.l.) in the same location “Untersberg”. Fungal diversity was lowest in the managed habitat in the nursery and was highest in natural habitat. Fungal diversity and compositions significantly associated the origin of the trees. Under natural conditions, the fungi were more diverse at lower altitudes than at higher altitudes. Additionally, leaf chlorophyll and flavonoid contents showed negative correlations with fungal richness in natural stands. In the second year (autumn 2014), another survey (chapter 3.3) was conducted on leaf endophytes of phytometer trees with metabarcoding and cultivation approaches to trace the environmental drivers and method-dependent indications. Metabarcoding resulted in 597 OTUs from 170480 curated ITS1 reads and cultivation revealed 70 OTUs from 438 culture-based Sanger sequences. Both approaches resulted in non-overlapping community compositions and pronounced differences in taxonomic classification and trophic stages. However, both methods revealed similar correlations of the fungal communities with local environmental conditions. Our results indicate undisputable advantages of metabarcoding over cultivation in terms of representation of the major functional guilds, rare taxa and diversity signals of leaf-inhabiting fungi. This stressed out the importance of cultivation for complementing sequence databases with good quality reference data and encouraged the use of both approaches in future microbial biodiversity assessment studies. Phytometer and natural trees were intensively investigated in this study (chapter 3.4) to assess the influence of site characteristics (altitudes, local microclimate), seasonality, leaf biochemistry and leaf age on fungal diversity and composition. In total, our analytical Illumina workflow resulted in 15703599 demultiplexed and ITS1 reads from 165 samples. Clustering at 97% similarity resulted in 1199 OTUs. Climatic parameters were significantly differed between valley and mountain on daily basis but were insignificantly differed on monthly basis. The compositional difference between phytometer and natural mycobiome was significant for combined data as well as for the seasonal data (Oct 2013-Oct 2014). We observed a strong seasonal turnover in phyllosphere fungi in both habitats over the two years of investigation, suggesting that the plant-fungal system not only responds to cyclic climatic conditions but depends as well on various parameters, e.g., geographic position, substrates age and surrounding vegetation. A side (chapter 3.5) study was done to see the connection between the foliar endophytes and foliar phenolic compounds of European aspen (Populus tremula) in the presence and absence of specialist beetles (Chrysomela tremula). A distinct pattern of the leaf endophytes was found to be associated with aspen genotype and chemotype, but this specificity disappeared in the presence of herbivorous beetles. This suggested that leaf endophytes responded to the herbivory in aspen. In general, the altitudinal difference is the most important explaining factor for fungal community differences, which shapes many dependent abiotic and biotic habitat factors. Regarding cost and time per sequence, metabarcoding is superior to cultivation approaches and offers surprisingly profound insights by yielding much more data, allowing to test at once multiple hypotheses in fungal ecology.