Global patterns in endemicity and vulnerability of soil fungi Academic Article

journal

  • Global Change Biology

abstract

  • Fungi are highly diverse organisms, which provide multiple ecosystem services. However, compared with charismatic animals and plants, the distribution patterns and conservation needs of fungi have been little explored. Here, we examined endemicity patterns, global change vulnerability and conservation priority areas for functional groups of soil fungi based on six global surveys using a high-resolution, long-read metabarcoding approach. We found that the endemicity of all fungi and most functional groups peaks in tropical habitats, including Amazonia, Yucatan, West-Central Africa, Sri Lanka, and New Caledonia, with a negligible island effect compared with plants and animals. We also found that fungi are predominantly vulnerable to drought, heat and land-cover change, particularly in dry tropical regions with high human population density. Fungal conservation areas of highest priority include herbaceous wetlands, tropical forests, and woodlands. We stress that more attention should be focused on the conservation of fungi, especially root symbiotic arbuscular mycorrhizal and ectomycorrhizal fungi in tropical regions as well as unicellular early-diverging groups and macrofungi in general. Given the low overlap between the endemicity of fungi and macroorganisms, but high conservation needs in both groups, detailed analyses on distribution and conservation requirements are warranted for other microorganisms and soil organisms.

authors

publication date

  • 2022-11-1

edition

  • 28

keywords

  • Amazonia
  • Central Africa
  • Ecosystem
  • Heat
  • New Caledonia
  • Soil
  • Sri Lanka
  • Western Africa
  • animal
  • animals
  • arid region
  • conservation areas
  • distribution
  • drought
  • ecosystem service
  • ecosystem services
  • effect
  • functional group
  • fungi
  • fungus
  • global change
  • habitat
  • habitats
  • heat
  • human population
  • indigenous species
  • land cover
  • microorganism
  • microorganisms
  • mycorrhizal fungi
  • need
  • organism
  • organisms
  • population density
  • protected area
  • soil
  • soil biota
  • soil fungi
  • soil organism
  • tropical forest
  • tropical forests
  • tropical region
  • tropics
  • vulnerability
  • wetland
  • wetlands
  • woodland
  • woodlands

International Standard Serial Number (ISSN)

  • 1354-1013

number of pages

  • 15

start page

  • 6696

end page

  • 6710