Authors
Luciana B Ranelli, Will Q Hendricks, Joshua S Lynn, Stephanie N Kivlin, Jennifer A Rudgers
Publication date
2015/8
Journal
Diversity and Distributions
Volume
21
Issue
8
Pages
962-976
Description
Aim
Fungal symbionts are ubiquitous in plants and can mitigate abiotic stressors associated with climate change. Predicting fungal symbiont distributions under future climates first requires knowledge of current distributions and their potential drivers.
Location
We documented colonization by fungal symbionts in perennial, cool‐season grasses along altitudinal gradients in the Rocky Mountains of Colorado, USA.
Methods
Across seven replicate altitudinal gradients, spanning c. 1400 vertical meters, we scored fungal colonization for 46 grass species. We documented altitudinal clines in colonization by both above‐ground and below‐ground fungal symbionts for the first time, including localized foliar endophytes (LFE) and systemic endophytes (epichloae) in leaves and arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi (AMF) and dark septate endophytes (DSE) in roots. For a subset of 16 well‐sampled grass species, we used model …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
LB Ranelli, WQ Hendricks, JS Lynn, SN Kivlin… - Diversity and Distributions, 2015