Access the full text.
Sign up today, get DeepDyve free for 14 days.
Richard Shefferson, C. Cowden, M. McCormick, T. Yukawa, Y. Ogura‐Tsujita, Toshimasa Hashimoto (2010)
Evolution of host breadth in broad interactions: mycorrhizal specificity in East Asian and North American rattlesnake plantains (Goodyera spp.) and their fungal hostsMolecular Ecology, 19
J. Losos (2008)
Phylogenetic niche conservatism, phylogenetic signal and the relationship between phylogenetic relatedness and ecological similarity among species.Ecology letters, 11 10
Author Grime (1977)
Evidence for the Existence of Three Primary Strategies in Plants and Its Relevance to Ecological and Evolutionary TheoryThe American Naturalist, 111
B. Gravendeel, A. Smithson, F. Slik, A. Schuiteman (2004)
Epiphytism and pollinator specialization: drivers for orchid diversity?Philosophical transactions of the Royal Society of London. Series B, Biological sciences, 359 1450
W. Ulrich, N. Gotelli (2007)
Null model analysis of species nestedness patterns.Ecology, 88 7
M. Cummings (2004)
PAUP* [Phylogenetic Analysis Using Parsimony (and Other Methods)]Dictionary of Bioinformatics and Computational Biology
Melissa McCormick, D. Whigham, J. O'neill (2004)
Mycorrhizal diversity in photosynthetic terrestrial orchids.The New phytologist, 163 2
D. Strasberg, M. Rouget, D. Richardson, Stéphane Baret, Joel Dupont, R. Cowling (2005)
An Assessment of Habitat Diversity and Transformation on La Réunion Island (Mascarene Islands, Indian Ocean) as a Basis for Identifying Broad-scale Conservation PrioritiesBiodiversity & Conservation, 14
H. Jacquemyn, V. Merckx, R. Brys, D. Tyteca, B. Cammue, O. Honnay, B. Lievens (2011)
Analysis of network architecture reveals phylogenetic constraints on mycorrhizal specificity in the genus Orchis (Orchidaceae).The New phytologist, 192 2
M. Selosse, Sabrina Setaro, F. Glatard, F. Richard, C. Urcelay, M. Weiß (2007)
Sebacinales are common mycorrhizal associates of Ericaceae.The New phytologist, 174 4
Montesinos‐Navarro Montesinos‐Navarro, Segarra‐Moragues Segarra‐Moragues, Valiente‐Banuet Valiente‐Banuet, Verdú Verdú (2012)
The network architecture of plant‐arbuscular mycorrhizal fungiNew Phytologist, 194
M. McCormick, D. Whigham, Daniel Sloan, Kelly O'Malley, B. Hodkinson (2006)
Orchid-fungus fidelity: a marriage meant to last?Ecology, 87 4
H. Rasmussen, F. Rasmussen (2009)
Orchid mycorrhiza: implications of a mycophagous life styleOikos, 118
M. Kondoh, Satoshi Kato, Yoshikuni Sakato (2010)
Food webs are built up with nested subwebs.Ecology, 91 11
M. Opik, M. Moora (2012)
Missing nodes and links in mycorrhizal networks.The New phytologist, 194 2
M. Newman (2006)
Modularity and community structure in networks.Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 103 23
Richard Shefferson, D. Taylor, M. Weiß, S. Garnica, M. McCormick, Seth Adams, H. Gray, J. McFarland, T. Kull, Kadri Tali, T. Yukawa, T. Kawahara, K. Miyoshi, Yung-I. Lee (2007)
THE EVOLUTIONARY HISTORY OF MYCORRHIZAL SPECIFICITY AMONG LADY'S SLIPPER ORCHIDS, 61
R. Guimerà, L. Amaral (2005)
Cartography of complex networks: modules and universal rolesJournal of Statistical Mechanics: Theory and Experiment, 2005
M. Selosse, M. Dubois, N. Alvarez (2009)
Do Sebacinales commonly associate with plant roots as endophytes?Mycological research, 113 Pt 10
A. Ives, H. C. J. Godfray (2006)
Phylogenetic Analysis of Trophic AssociationsThe American Naturalist, 168
M. Cummings (2000)
PAUP* Phylogenetic analysis using parsimony (*and other methods) Version 4
D. Benzing (1990)
Vascular Epiphytes: General Biology and Related Biota
I. Alexander, M. Selosse (2009)
Mycorrhizas in tropical forests: a neglected research imperative.The New phytologist, 182 1
S. Laube, G. Zotz (2003)
Which abiotic factors limit vegetative growth in a vascular epiphyteFunctional Ecology, 17
J. Nylander, J. Nylander, J. Nylander, J. Nylander (2004)
MrModeltest 2.2. Program Distributed by the Author
J. Otero, James Ackerman, P. Bayman (2002)
Diversity and host specificity of endophytic Rhizoctonia-like fungi from tropical orchids.American journal of botany, 89 11
P. Chagnon, R. Bradley, J. Klironomos (2012)
Using ecological network theory to evaluate the causes and consequences of arbuscular mycorrhizal community structure.The New phytologist, 194 2
R. Tirado, F. Pugnaire (2005)
Community structure and positive interactions in constraining environmentsOikos, 111
P. Cribb, S. Kell, K. Dixon, R. Barrett (2003)
Orchid conservation: A global perspective
R. Guimerà, L. Amaral (2005)
Functional cartography of complex metabolic networksNature, 433
C. Fontaine, P. Guimarães, S. Kéfi, N. Loeuille, J. Memmott, W. Putten, F. Veen, É. Thébault (2011)
The ecological and evolutionary implications of merging different types of networks.Ecology letters, 14 11
N. Mouquet, V. Devictor, C. Meynard, F. Munoz, Louis-Félix Bersier, J. Chave, P. Couteron, A. Dalecky, C. Fontaine, D. Gravel, O. Hardy, F. Jabot, S. Lavergne, M. Leibold, D. Mouillot, T. Münkemüller, S. Pavoine, A. Prinzing, A. Rodrigues, Rudolf Rohr, É. Thébault, W. Thuiller (2012)
Ecophylogenetics: advances and perspectivesBiological Reviews, 87
J. Otero, N. Flanagan, E. Herre, J. Ackerman, P. Bayman (2007)
Widespread mycorrhizal specificity correlates to mycorrhizal function in the neotropical, epiphytic orchid Ionopsis utricularioides (Orchidaceae).American journal of botany, 94 12
F. Martos, M. Dulormne, T. Pailler, P. Bonfante, A. Faccio, J. Fournel, M. Dubois, M. Selosse (2009)
Independent recruitment of saprotrophic fungi as mycorrhizal partners by tropical achlorophyllous orchids.The New phytologist, 184 3
Li-Yong Yuan, Zhu-Liang Yang, Shuyun Li, Hong Hu, Jia-lin Huang (2010)
Mycorrhizal specificity, preference, and plasticity of six slipper orchids from South Western ChinaMycorrhiza, 20
M. Barber (2007)
Modularity and community detection in bipartite networks.Physical review. E, Statistical, nonlinear, and soft matter physics, 76 6 Pt 2
N. Myers, R. Mittermeier, C. Mittermeier, G. Fonseca, J. Kent (2000)
Biodiversity hotspots for conservation prioritiesNature, 403
and analysed the data. I.K. performed the TEM observations
M. Kessler, R. Jonas, D. Strasberg, M. Lehnert (2010)
Mycorrhizal colonizations of ferns and lycophytes on the island of La Réunion in relation to nutrient availabilityBasic and Applied Ecology, 11
C. Vacher, D. Piou, M. Desprez-Loustau (2008)
Architecture of an Antagonistic Tree/Fungus Network: The Asymmetric Influence of Past Evolutionary HistoryPLoS ONE, 3
H. Jacquemyn, O. Honnay, B. Cammue, R. Brys, B. Lievens (2010)
Low specificity and nested subset structure characterize mycorrhizal associations in five closely related species of the genus OrchisMolecular Ecology, 19
G. Zotz, P. Hietz (2001)
The physiological ecology of vascular epiphytes: current knowledge, open questions.Journal of experimental botany, 52 364
Takahiro Yagame, T. Orihara, M. Selosse, M. Yamato, K. Iwase (2012)
Mixotrophy of Platanthera minor, an orchid associated with ectomycorrhiza-forming Ceratobasidiaceae fungi.The New phytologist, 193 1
S. Proulx, D. Promislow, P. Phillips (2005)
Network thinking in ecology and evolution.Trends in ecology & evolution, 20 6
A. Montesinos‐Navarro, J. Segarra‐Moragues, A. Valiente‐Banuet, M. Verdú (2012)
The network structure of plant-arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi.The New phytologist, 194 2
D. Vázquez, N. Chacoff, L. Cagnolo (2009)
Evaluating multiple determinants of the structure of plant-animal mutualistic networks.Ecology, 90 8
Richard Waterman, M. Bidartondo, J. Stofberg, Julie Combs, G. Gebauer, V. Savolainen, T. Barraclough, A. Pauw (2011)
The Effects of Above- and Belowground Mutualisms on Orchid Speciation and CoexistenceThe American Naturalist, 177
M. Weiß, Z. Sýkorová, S. Garnica, Kai Riess, F. Martos, C. Krause, F. Oberwinkler, R. Bauer, D. Redecker (2011)
Sebacinales Everywhere: Previously Overlooked Ubiquitous Fungal EndophytesPLoS ONE, 6
J. Bascompte, P. Jordano, J. Olesen (2006)
Asymmetric Coevolutionary Networks Facilitate Biodiversity MaintenanceScience, 312
(2012)
Orchid mycorrhizas: molecular ecology, physiology, evolution and conservation aspects. In: The Mycota Volume IX – Plant Fungal Interactions (ed Esser K) (revised edition
Omid Alizadeh (2011)
Mycorrhizal Symbiosis
M. Almeida-Neto, M. Almeida-Neto, Rafael Loyola, Gleb Wataghin, Werner Ulrich (2008)
A consistent metric for nestedness analysis in ecological systems: reconciling concept and measurementOikos, 117
C. Micheneau, Barbara Carlsward, M. Fay, B. Bytebier, T. Pailler, M. Chase (2008)
Phylogenetics and biogeography of Mascarene angraecoid orchids (Vandeae, Orchidaceae).Molecular phylogenetics and evolution, 46 3
Robert Dressler, H. Rasmussen (1996)
Terrestrial Orchids: From Seed to Mycotrophic Plant.Systematic Botany, 21
K. Hughes, R. Petersen, Edgar Lickey (2009)
Using heterozygosity to estimate a percentage DNA sequence similarity for environmental species' delimitation across basidiomycete fungi.The New phytologist, 182 4
J. Bascompte, P. Jordano (2007)
Plant-Animal Mutualistic Networks: The Architecture of BiodiversityAnnual Review of Ecology, Evolution, and Systematics, 38
J. Cavender-Bares, K. Kozak, P. Fine, S. Kembel (2009)
The merging of community ecology and phylogenetic biology.Ecology letters, 12 7
D. Swofford, D. Swofford, D. Swofford (2002)
PAUP*: Phylogenetic analysis using parsimony (*and other methods), Version 4.0b10
N. Swarts, K. Dixon (2009)
Terrestrial orchid conservation in the age of extinction.Annals of botany, 104 3
I. Kottke, J. Suárez, Paulo Herrera, Darío Cruz, R. Bauer, I. Haug, S. Garnica (2010)
Atractiellomycetes belonging to the ‘rust’ lineage (Pucciniomycotina) form mycorrhizae with terrestrial and epiphytic neotropical orchidsProceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences, 277
D. Cameron, I. Johnson, D. Read, J. Leake (2008)
Giving and receiving: measuring the carbon cost of mycorrhizas in the green orchid, Goodyera repens.The New phytologist, 180 1
R. Dressler (2005)
How Many Orchid Species
J. Suárez, M. Weiß, Andrea Abele, F. Oberwinkler, I. Kottke (2008)
Members of Sebacinales subgroup B form mycorrhizae with epiphytic orchids in a neotropical mountain rain forestMycological Progress, 7
É. Thébault, C. Fontaine (2010)
Stability of Ecological Communities and the Architecture of Mutualistic and Trophic NetworksScience, 329
R. Guimerà, M. Sales-Pardo, L. Amaral (2004)
Modularity from fluctuations in random graphs and complex networks.Physical review. E, Statistical, nonlinear, and soft matter physics, 70 2 Pt 2
Gotelli Gotelli, Entsminger Entsminger (2001)
Swap and fill algorithms in null model analysis: rethinking the knight’s tourOecologia, 129
S. Roche, R. Carter, R. Peakall, L. Smith, M. Whitehead, C. Linde (2010)
A narrow group of monophyletic Tulasnella (Tulasnellaceae) symbiont lineages are associated with multiple species of Chiloglottis (Orchidaceae): Implications for orchid diversity.American journal of botany, 97 8
J. Dearnaley, F. Martos, M. Selosse (2012)
12 Orchid Mycorrhizas: Molecular Ecology, Physiology, Evolution and Conservation Aspects
Pablo Asprelli, Agustina Novillo, Cecilia, Lanzone, J. Valdez (2007)
THE GEOGRAPHIC MOSAIC OF COEVOLUTION
E. Rezende, P. Jordano, J. Bascompte (2007)
Effects of phenotypic complementarity and phylogeny on the nested structure of mutualistic networksOikos, 116
D. Cameron, J. Leake, D. Read (2006)
Mutualistic mycorrhiza in orchids: evidence from plant-fungus carbon and nitrogen transfers in the green-leaved terrestrial orchid Goodyera repens.The New phytologist, 171 2
Thomas Julou, B. Burghardt, G. Gebauer, D. Berveiller, C. Damesin, M. Selosse (2005)
Mixotrophy in orchids: insights from a comparative study of green individuals and nonphotosynthetic individuals of Cephalanthera damasonium.The New phytologist, 166 2
R. Moore (1987)
The genera of Rhizoctonia-like fungi: Ascorhizoctonia, Ceratorhiza gen. nov., Epulorhiza gen. nov., Moniliopsis, and RhizoctoniaMycotaxon, 29
W. Ulrich, M. Almeida-Neto, N. Gotelli (2009)
A consumer's guide to nestedness analysisOikos, 118
J. Otero, J. Ackerman, P. Bayman (2004)
Differences in mycorrhizal preferences between two tropical orchidsMolecular Ecology, 13
S. Kembel, P. Cowan, M. Helmus, W. Cornwell, H. Morlon, D. Ackerly, S. Blomberg, Campbell Webb (2010)
Picante: R tools for integrating phylogenies and ecologyBioinformatics, 26 11
S. Blomberg, T. Garland, A. Ives (2003)
TESTING FOR PHYLOGENETIC SIGNAL IN COMPARATIVE DATA: BEHAVIORAL TRAITS ARE MORE LABILE, 57
J. Suárez, M. Weiß, Andrea Abele, S. Garnica, F. Oberwinkler, I. Kottke (2006)
Diverse tulasnelloid fungi form mycorrhizas with epiphytic orchids in an Andean cloud forest.Mycological research, 110 Pt 11
J. Bascompte, P. Jordano, Carlos Melián, J. Olesen (2003)
The nested assembly of plant–animal mutualistic networksProceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 100
D. Vázquez, N. Blüthgen, L. Cagnolo, N. Chacoff (2009)
Uniting pattern and process in plant-animal mutualistic networks: a review.Annals of botany, 103 9
Characterizing the architecture of bipartite networks is increasingly used as a framework to study biotic interactions within their ecological context and to assess the extent to which evolutionary constraint shape them. Orchid mycorrhizal symbioses are particularly interesting as they are viewed as more beneficial for plants than for fungi, a situation expected to result in an asymmetry of biological constraint. This study addressed the architecture and phylogenetic constraint in these associations in tropical context. We identified a bipartite network including 73 orchid species and 95 taxonomic units of mycorrhizal fungi across the natural habitats of Reunion Island. Unlike some recent evidence for nestedness in mycorrhizal symbioses, we found a highly modular architecture that largely reflected an ecological barrier between epiphytic and terrestrial subnetworks. By testing for phylogenetic signal, the overall signal was stronger for both partners in the epiphytic subnetwork. Moreover, in the subnetwork of epiphytic angraecoid orchids, the signal in orchid phylogeny was stronger than the signal in fungal phylogeny. Epiphytic associations are therefore more conservative and may co‐evolve more than terrestrial ones. We suggest that such tighter phylogenetic specialization may have been driven by stressful life conditions in the epiphytic niches. In addition to paralleling recent insights into mycorrhizal networks, this study furthermore provides support for epiphytism as a major factor affecting ecological assemblage and evolutionary constraint in tropical mycorrhizal symbioses.
Molecular Ecology – Wiley
Published: Oct 1, 2012
Read and print from thousands of top scholarly journals.
Already have an account? Log in
Bookmark this article. You can see your Bookmarks on your DeepDyve Library.
To save an article, log in first, or sign up for a DeepDyve account if you don’t already have one.
Copy and paste the desired citation format or use the link below to download a file formatted for EndNote
Access the full text.
Sign up today, get DeepDyve free for 14 days.
All DeepDyve websites use cookies to improve your online experience. They were placed on your computer when you launched this website. You can change your cookie settings through your browser.