New Phytologist
Vol. 138, n.3, (1998): 533-542.
Genetic structure of a natural population of the ectomycorrhizal fungus
Suillus pungens
Bonello, P; Bruns, T D; Gardes, M.
Abstract
Sequence-based markers were developed to study the genetic structure and
reproductive biology of the ectomycorrhizal fungus Suillus pungens Thiers &
Smith in a Bishop pine (Pinus muricata D. Don) forest. Six different
basidiome genotypes were found in a 1200 m-2 area. Five of the six genotypes
were represented by single basidiomes. The remaining genotype comprised 13
basidiomes and covered an area of at least 300 ml, with maximum measured
dimensions of 40 m and 14 m. This is the largest genet of an ectomycorrhizal
fungus described to date, and is likely the result of vegetative growth, because
analysis of single spore isolates eliminates the possibility of genetic identity
resulting from either apomixis or fortuitously indistinguishable recombinant
genotypes. Genetic analysis also shows that although out-crossing appears to
predominate in the population, at least a low percentage (1.4%) of spores are
secondarily homothallic. The combination of extensive vegetative growth
and abundant fruiting suggests S. pungens utilizes more carbon than might
be expected for a species which accounts for lt 3% of the total ectomycorrhizal
abundance at the site. Additional carbon might come from either more
efficient host-fungus transfer, pooling of carbon from the roots of different
host plants, or saprophytism.
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