Bark protects living trees against environmental influences but may
promote wood decomposition by fungi and bacteria after tree death.
However, the mechanism, by which bark determines the assembly process
and biodiversity of decomposers remain unknown. Therefore, we partially
or completely removed bark from experimentally felled trees and tested
with null modelling whether assembly processes were determined by bark
coverage and if biodiversity Of molecularly sampled fungi and bacteria
generally benefited from increasing bark cover. The community
composition of fungi, wood-decaying fungi (subset of all fungi) and
bacteria clearly separated between completely debarked, partly debarked
and control trees. Bacterial species richness was higher on control
trees than on either partly or completely debarked trees, whereas the
species richness of all fungi did not differ. However, the species
richness of wood-decaying fungi was higher on partially and completely
debarked trees than on control trees. Deterministic assembly processes
were most important in completely debarked trees, a pattern consistent
for fungi and bacteria. Our findings suggest that human disturbances in
forests shift the dominant assembly mechanism from stochastic to
deterministic processes and thus alter the diversity of wood-inhabiting
microorganisms.
«
Bark protects living trees against environmental influences but may
promote wood decomposition by fungi and bacteria after tree death.
However, the mechanism, by which bark determines the assembly process
and biodiversity of decomposers remain unknown. Therefore, we partially
or completely removed bark from experimentally felled trees and tested
with null modelling whether assembly processes were determined by bark
coverage and if biodiversity Of molecularly sampled fungi and bacteria
generally...
»