Microbial landscapes in Trinervitermes trinervoides termite colonies are affected by mound compartments and soil properties but not by symbiotic Podaxis fungi

Kasun H. Bodawatta, Lorrie Maccario, Nils Peereboom, Benjamin H. Conlon, Guangshuo Li, Tamás Plaszkó, Celia Vinagre-Izquierdo, Knud A. Jønsson, Risto M. Vesala, Z. Wilhelm de Beer, Anders Priemé, Michael Poulsen*

*Corresponding author af dette arbejde

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Abstract

Termites are important ecosystem engineers and play key roles in modulating microbial communities within and outside their mounds. Microbial diversity within termite mounds is generally lower than surrounding soils, due to termite-associated antimicrobial compounds and active sanitary behaviours. Microbial symbionts of termites can also influence the microbial landscape, by inhibiting or out-competing other microbes. Certain members of the arid habitat fungal genus Podaxis (Agaricomycetes; Agaricaceae) are symbiotic with savannah specialist grass-cutting termites, and have the potential to influence mound-associated microbiomes. To test this, we characterized fungal (ITS2) and bacterial (16S rRNA) communities within and outside 49 Trinervitermes trinervoides mounds with and without Podaxis fruiting bodies across a 1000 km transect in South Africa. We predicted that Podaxis would be a dominant member of the fungal communities in mounds and negatively impact microbial diversity. Further, we explored how environmental variables shaped microbial communities, including whether soil elemental composition affected Podaxis presence. As expected, we observed less diverse fungal communities, but not bacterial communities, within than outside mounds, while microbial communities differed by sampling regions and mound compartments. Podaxis sequences were present in 48 out of 49 mounds in low relative abundances, and neither fruiting body presence nor sequence abundance were associated with microbial diversity or composition. There was, however, an overall association between the presence of Podaxis fruiting bodies and elemental composition, with different elements displaying varying associations depending on geographic region. Both environmental variables and soil elements were associated with fungal and bacterial taxa, indicating that they are key drivers of microbial community composition. Taken together, our findings suggest that microbial landscapes in termite mounds are not strongly influenced by Podaxis but mainly driven by termite filtering and regional abiotic variables and elemental compositions.
OriginalsprogEngelsk
Artikelnummer177015
TidsskriftScience of the Total Environment
Vol/bind957
Antal sider13
ISSN0048-9697
DOI
StatusUdgivet - 2024

Bibliografisk note

Funding Information:
This work was funded by The Danish Council for Independent Research (DFF \u2013 7014-00178) to MP. AP and TP were supported by the Danish National Research Foundation (Center for Volatile Interactions - VOLT, DNRF168). We thank Olga Nielsen and Tonny Bernt Thomsen for carrying out ICP-MS analyses, Luka Alexander Civa for help with sorting ITS sequences, and members of the Social and Symbiotic Evolution Group at the UCPH for critical comments to a previous version of this manuscript. GL was supported by a PhD scholarship from the China Scholarship Council.

Funding Information:
This work was funded by The Danish Council for Independent Research (DFF \u2013 7014-00178 ) to MP. AP and TP were supported by the Danish National Research Foundation (Center for Volatile Interactions - VOLT, DNRF168 ). We thank Olga Nielsen and Tonny Bernt Thomsen for carrying out ICP-MS analyses, Luka Alexander Civa for help with sorting ITS sequences, and members of the Social and Symbiotic Evolution Group at the UCPH for critical comments to a previous version of this manuscript. GL is supported by a PhD scholarship from the China Scholarship Council .

Publisher Copyright:
© 2024 The Author(s)

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