%A Dai Hirose, Takashi Shirouzu, Mitsuru Hirota, Toshiyuki Ohtsuka, Yukiko Senga, Mingyuan Du, Ayako Shimono, Xianzhou Zhang %T Species richness and species composition of fungal communities associated with cellulose decomposition at different altitudes on the Tibetan Plateau %0 Journal Article %D 2009 %J J Plant Ecol %R 10.1093/jpe/rtp028 %P 217-224 %V 2 %N 4 %U {https://www.jpe.ac.cn/CN/abstract/article_28481.shtml} %8 2009-11-30 %X Aims The aims of this study were to compare the fungal communities developing on cotton strips at three different altitudes on the Tibetan Plateau and to assess the environmental variables influencing them.
Methods Cotton strips that had been buried in soil for a year were sampled at three sites at different altitudes (4500, 4950 and 5200 m) located on a southeast-facing slope on the Nyainqentanglha Mountains near Damxung. The fungi on the cotton strips were isolated using a modified washing method. The decomposition abilities and colony growth properties of the major species cultured in pure-culture conditions were investigated and compared. Canonical correspondence analysis (CCA) was used to evaluate the relationships between fungal community composition and environmental variables (altitude, soil depth, soil water content [SWC], plant root mass and gravel content).
Important findings A total of 24 species were isolated from the cotton strips, and 12 species occurred frequently and were regarded as major species. The number of fungal species was lower at the 4950-m altitude site than at the other two sites, indicating that not only altitude but also other factors affected the number of species present. All of the major species were able to decompose the cotton strips. In the CCA ordination, automatic forward selection revealed that altitude, SWC and plant root mass significantly affected fungal species composition. Our results suggest that species number and the composition of cellulolytic fungal communities are highly correlated with environmental variables as well as altitude in the alpine meadow on the Tibetan Plateau.