| Literature DB >> 34163510 |
Adeline Stewart1,2,3, Delphine Rioux3, Fréderic Boyer3, Ludovic Gielly3, François Pompanon3, Amélie Saillard3, Wilfried Thuiller3, Jean-Gabriel Valay2, Eric Maréchal1, Eric Coissac3.
Abstract
Mountain environments are marked by an altitudinal zonation of habitat types. They are home to a multitude of terrestrialEntities:
Keywords: Chlorophyta; Sanguina; biodiversity; high elevation; metabarcoding; mountain environment; snow algae; soil
Year: 2021 PMID: 34163510 PMCID: PMC8215661 DOI: 10.3389/fpls.2021.679428
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Plant Sci ISSN: 1664-462X Impact factor: 5.753
FIGURE 1Aerial view of the five sampled elevational gradients and their topography (1,250–2,940 m). Selected sites cover the full range of environments and habitats found in the Alpine altitudinal zonation and a representative geographical distribution. DNA was extracted from soil collected at each sampling location and used for an evaluation of Chlorophyta communities by DNA metabarcoding. Satellite images from Nasa.
Amplified MOTU and read counts by each marker for all samples.
| Marker | Number of MOTU and reads in raw data | Number of MOTU and reads after filtering | Number of green algae MOTU and reads |
| Chlo01 | 1,280,988 MOTUs 12,849,650 reads | 4,080 MOTUs 5,763,181 reads | 566 MOTUs 3,305,241 reads |
| Chlo02 | 2,392,669 MOTUs 32,640,026 reads | 8,580 MOTUs 6,210,043 reads | 61 MOTUs 186,616 reads |
| Euka03 | 1,902,234 MOTUs 13,604,341 reads | 8,743 MOTUs 5,700,798 reads | 37 MOTUs 14,829 reads |
FIGURE 2Relative frequencies of three eukaryotic clades; Fungi, Streptophyta, and Chlorophyta, among the sampling sites. The lower and upper limits of the boxes correspond to the first and third quartile, respectively, while the bold center line marks the median. The whiskers delineate the confidence interval defined as 1.5 times the difference between the first and third quartile. Outlier PCRs ranging outside of that interval are marked with dots.
FIGURE 3On a logarithmic scale, the relative frequencies of Chlorophyta reads estimated by the two markers Chlo01 and Euka03 are correlated. The linear model (dotted line) was estimated using an iteratively reweighted least squares procedure (IRLS) to underweight the influence of the few outliers PCRs. The blue scale indicates the weight associated to each PCR after the convergence of the algorithm.
FIGURE 4Endemism of the MOTUs according to their maximum frequency of occurrence in one of the gradients. The higher a MOTU has a high frequency of reads on at least one gradient, the more likely it will be present in many gradients.
FIGURE 5Impact of environmental parameters on algae community diversity. Each gradient is divided in seven parts. This division allows for mixing in a single part, samples from several sites. The bold horizontal bars indicate the mean of the diversity for the covered interval. The whiskers delimitate the 95% confidence interval of that mean. The p-values are adjusted for multiple tests using the false discovery rate method (Benjamini and Hochberg, 1995). The determination coefficients R2 measure the part of the variance explained by the sliced gradients using one way ANOVA.
FIGURE 6Distribution of the four taxonomic classes of Chlorophyta. Trebouxiophyceae and Chlorophyceae are the two main clades. Pedinophyceae just occurs sporadically in two PCRs on the RIS gradient.
FIGURE 7Trebouxiophyceae and Chlorophyceae relative abundance was impacted by soil pH (A), elevation (B), CWD (C), and FDD (D). The upper lines indicate the tendency of Trebouxiophyceae relative abundance when the environmental (pH, elevation) or bioclimatic (CWD, FDD) values increase. The opposite trend is materialized for the Chlorophyceae by the bottom dashed lines.
FIGURE 8Redundancy analysis (RDA) of the Chlorophyta community against seven environmental (Nitrogen, Elevation, C/N ratio, pH) and bioclimatic (DRT, CWD, FDD) variables.
FIGURE 9Read relative frequency along elevation for each genus identified. Arrows indicate the median. The range in grey centered on the pic of density is where the MOTU is the most abundant. P-values were evaluated using the Mann–Whitney test. Bold taxon names indicate a significant p-value at 0.05.
FIGURE 10Principal component analysis of the 43 taxa with specialized niche. Taxa are positioned according to the Outlying Mean Index (OMI) of their niche.