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in understory composition (F1,68 = 1.24, p = 0.251). While not conclusive, this result suggests that the
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light environment’s effects on the soil microbiome is unlikely to be driven by changes in the plant
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understory composition.
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4.2. Biotic Factors: The Role of Understory Plant Communities and Tree Density in Fungal Community
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Diversity and Composition
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Our study showed that biotic factors may also have consequences for the Everglades tree
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islands soil fungi. We found that the characteristics of the understory plant community explained
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variation in fungal community diversity, richness, and composition. For instance, as understory plant
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community evenness increased, so did both fungal diversity and richness. This relationship may stem
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from differences among plant species in their priming of soil microbial communities [75] and/or their
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contributions to the leaf litter [76]. Plants can actively manipulate the soil microbial community through
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the release of root exudates [77] and allelochemicals [78], and this priming can be species-specific.
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Similarly, plants can have species-specific differences in their leaf litter, and the composition of leaf litter
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can influence fungal communities [79]. Soil priming and litter deposition by a more even understory
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plant community may promote a more even distribution of soil microhabitats for fungal taxa to use,
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thereby fostering the greater fungal diversity we found. We also demonstrated that differences in
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plant community composition among sites are significantly related to differences in fungal community
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composition. Unlike the effects of manipulated variables such as core type and tree density, we cannot
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determine the direction of interaction (i.e., plant understory community composition is driving fungal
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community composition, the reverse, or both are responding to an external pressure). However, it is
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well known that fungal and plant communities are interlinked [80]. Understory plant communities
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may change fungal communities through their root exudates [77], leaf litter [81,82], or by acting
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as hosts for pathogenic or mutualistic fungi [83]. Furthermore, a thriving understory community
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may provide shade, thus changing the microhabitat conditions of soil moisture. On the other hand,
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fungal composition may alter plant composition through nutrient availability [84], decomposition [85],
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water availability [9], pathogen load [86], or mutualistic interactions [87]. Most likely, both the
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Diversity 2020, 12, 0324 11 of 17
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fungal and plant communities are affecting one another via plant-soil feedbacks [88] and are also
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mutually responding to major abiotic factors such as hydrology. Future work that manipulates
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these components (i.e., abiotic factors, microbial and plant community characteristics) using factorial
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mesocosm experiments is needed to fully determine the strength and direction in which these
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communities are affecting one another, and how much outside habitat characteristics contribute to
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this relationship. In addition, the initial tree planting density was identified by model selection as
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part of the best model for fungal community richness. While its effect was not significant within the
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best model (nor was tree density as commonly implicated as the understory plant community in our
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analyses), tree density’s inclusion in the best model hints at a role for this experimentally manipulated
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factor in influencing fungal communities. Future studies investigating the effects of tree composition
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on fungal communities could provide additional insights into consequences for fungi that investigating
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tree density alone may miss.
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4.3. Fungal Functional Guilds on Tree Islands
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In addition to characterizing fungal diversity and composition, our study provided initial insight
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into fungal contributions to ecosystem services by characterizing the distribution of fungal functional
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guilds on tree islands. While not all fungal taxa could be characterized into functional groups by
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FUNGuild and functions sometimes differ between ecosystems [89], this approach represents a first step
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in understanding how different restoration decisions and environmental variation may impact fungal
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roles within Everglades tree islands. For example, we found that the number of guilds was significantly
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greater in sites with a more even plant understory community, which is in line with the greater fungal
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taxa diversity at these sites. The arbuscular mycorrhizal fungal guild (fungal mutualists that associate
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with plant roots and trade water/nutrients acquired through hyphal networks for photosynthetic
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carbon) was present at all five of the sites with the highest plant understory evenness, while the five sites
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with the lowest plant evenness shared the ‘tri-guild’ of dung saprotroph-wood saprotroph-undefined
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saprotroph in common. More broadly, we found that some guilds were often missing from the
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sites with the low functional richness. In particular, we noted that 5 of the 9 saprotroph guilds
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(i.e., dung, leaf, soil, wood, undefined, and undefined-wood saprotroph guilds) were present in none
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of the 15 most guild-poor sites. While two of these guilds—leaf and undefined-wood saprotroph—were
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also commonly absent in guild-rich sites, this general loss of saprotroph guilds in guild-poor sites
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suggests that functional losses may first affect decomposition services.
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When we examined the top three most common individual guilds of fungi, only pathogen–wood
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saprotrophs were affected by any abiotic or biotic factors. Specifically, as the relative water level
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increased, pathogen-wood saprotrophs’ relative abundance decreased, which indicates that changes in
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water management may have cascading effects on pathogen-wood saprotroph abundance. In addition
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to the possible direct effects of water on pathogens, increases in tree stress caused by low water levels
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may make trees more susceptible to pathogens, increasing the abundance of this guild. While some tree
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island plants prefer lower water levels, flood-tolerant trees are often more stressed when water levels
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drop (stress indicated by leaf loss; Sah, unpublished observation), which could increase the pathogen load
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in drier sites. The relationship between water level and pathogen abundance detected in this study is
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important to consider when managing tree islands, as lower water levels could possibly result in more
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fungal pathogens and lower overall fungal diversity. Due to the possible dual function of the species
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in this guild, future studies are needed to determine if plant pathogen-wood saprotrophs taxa are
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acting more as pathogens or decomposers across tree islands. This additional information on fungal
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function could help inform management decisions, since plant pathogens could be detrimental to tree
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island stability, while wood saprotrophs may be important for soil formation [36,90]. Alternatively,
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members of this dual-function guild may be plant pathogens that decompose the woody vegetation of
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their host once it declines and/or dies. A more nuanced understanding of the function and life histories
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of taxa within this guild may be especially important, as manipulations of Everglades hydrology as
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well as increases in hydroperiod have led to the loss of soil on tree islands [41,91].
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Diversity 2020, 12, 0324 12 of 17
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While these results provide a crucial first look at the consequences of management decisions and
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environmental variation for the fungal community function, substantial gaps still remain to be filled.
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For example, we found that many taxa were not identifiable at the species level, making it difficult to use
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the FUNGuild database to characterize the functions of these diverse taxa (likely including taxa unique
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to the imperiled Everglades). Further, using amplicon sequencing alone makes it difficult to gain a full
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perspective into community function [92]. We suggest that future work investigate function through
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complementary approaches, such as functional assays, metatranscriptomics, and the direct assessment
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of fungal structures. For example, growth under different resource conditions and functional gene
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assays could inform our understanding of the primary mode of nutrition and assess some functional
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effects (e.g., [93,94]). Metatranscriptomic studies could further help elucidate functional responses by
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determining which functional genes have expression that is actively being up- and down-regulated
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within communities experiencing different management decisions [95]. In addition, studies of fungal
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structures would provide more insight into fungal diversity and how environmental variables influence
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the distribution of life history stages (i.e., hyphae, spores, fruiting bodies) of taxa.
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5. Conclusions and Future Work
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This study demonstrates that soil fungal communities on Everglades tree islands can be driven
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by abiotic and biotic factors, some of which are determined by management decisions. Our results
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indicate that early restoration decisions can have long-term consequences for fungal communities and
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suggest that a drier future in the Everglades could reduce fungal diversity on imperiled tree islands.
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In addition to hydrology and tree establishment, future restoration projects may want to consider the
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understory plant community, as our study shows a relationship between the understory community
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and fungal diversity and function. In our opinion, there are at least two general types of studies that
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are likely to be profitable going forward. First, additional manipulative experiments at macrocosm and
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