Data from: Fungal communities are important determinants of bacterial community composition in deadwood

  1. Odriozola, Iñaki 1
  2. Abrego, Nerea 2
  3. Tláskal, Vojtěch 1
  4. Zrůstová, Petra 1
  5. Kumazawa Morais, Daniel 1
  6. Větrovský, Tomáš 1
  7. Ovaskainen, Otso 2
  8. Baldrian, Petr 1
  1. 1 Academy of Sciences of the Czech Republic
    info

    Academy of Sciences of the Czech Republic

    Praga, República Checa

    ROR https://ror.org/053avzc18

  2. 2 University of Helsinki
    info

    University of Helsinki

    Helsinki, Finlandia

    ROR https://ror.org/040af2s02

Editor: Dryad

Año de publicación: 2020

Tipo: Dataset

CC0 1.0

Resumen

Fungal-bacterial interactions play a key role in the functioning of many ecosystems. Thus, understanding their interactive dynamics is of central importance for gaining predictive knowledge on ecosystem functioning. However, it is challenging to disentangle the mechanisms behind species associations from observed co-occurrence patterns and little is known about the directionality of such interactions. Here we apply joint species distribution modelling to high-throughput sequencing data on co-occurring fungal and bacterial communities in deadwood to ask whether fungal and bacterial co-occurrences result from shared habitat use (i.e. dead wood’s properties), or whether there are fungal-bacterial interactive associations after habitat characteristics are taken into account. Moreover, we test the hypothesis that the interactions are mainly modulated through fungal communities influencing bacterial communities. For that, we quantified how much the predictive power of the joint species distribution models for bacterial and fungal community improved when accounting for the other community. Our results show that fungi and bacteria form tight association networks (i.e. some species pairs co-occur more frequently and other species pairs co-occur less frequently  than expected by chance) in deadwood that include common (or opposite) responses to the environment, as well as (potentially) biotic interactions. Additionally, we show that information about the fungal occurrences and abundances increased the power to predict the bacterial abundances substantially, whereas information about the bacterial occurrences and abundances increased the power to predict the fungal abundances much less. Our results suggest that fungal communities may mainly affect bacteria in deadwood. Importance Understanding the interactive dynamics between fungal and bacterial communities is important to gain predictive knowledge on ecosystem functioning. However little is known about the mechanisms behind fungal-bacterial associations and the directionality of species interactions. Applying joint species distribution modelling to high throughput sequencing data on co-occurring fungal-bacterial communities in deadwood, we found evidence that non-random fungal-bacterial associations derive from shared habitat use, as well as (potentially) biotic interactions. Importantly, the combination of cross-validations and conditional cross-validations helped us to answer the question about the directionality of the biotic interactions, providing evidence that suggests that fungal communities may mainly affect bacteria in deadwood. Our modelling approach may help gaining insight into the directionality of interactions between different components of the microbiome in other environments.