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de Boer, W; Folman, LB; Summerbell, RC; Boddy, L. 2005. Living in a fungal world: impact of fungi on soil bacterial niche development. FEMS MICROBIOLOGY REVIEWS. 29(4):795-811.
Address:
de Boer, W, NIOO, Ctr Terrestrial Ecol, Dept Plant Microorganism
Interact, POB 40, NL-6666 ZG Heteren, Netherlands
The colonization of land by plants appears to have coincided with the
appearance of mycorrhiza-like fungi. Over evolutionary time, fungi have
maintained their prominent role in the formation of mycorrhizal
associations. In addition, however, they have been able to occupy other
terrestrial niches of which the decomposition of recalcitrant organic
matter is perhaps the most remarkable. This implies that, in contrast
to that of aquatic organic matter decomposition, bacteria have not been
able to monopolize decomposition processes in terrestrial ecosystems.
The emergence of fungi in terrestrial ecosystems must have had a strong
impact on the evolution of terrestrial bacteria. On the one hand,
potential decomposition niches, e.g. lignin degradation, have been lost
for bacteria, whereas on the other hand the presence of fungi has
itself created new bacterial niches. Confrontation between bacteria and
fungi is ongoing, and from studying contemporary interactions, we can
learn about the impact that fungi presently have, and have had in the
past, on the ecology and evolution of terrestrial bacteria. In the
first part of this review, the focus is on niche differentiation
between soil bacteria and fungi involved in the decomposition of
plant-derived organic matter. Bacteria and fungi are seen to compete
for simple plant-derived substrates and have developed antagonistic
strategies. For more recalcitrant organic substrates, e.g. cellulose
and lignin, both competitive and mutualistic strategies appear to have
evolved. In the second part of the review, bacterial niches with
respect to the utilization of fungal-derived substrates are considered.
Here, several lines of development can be recognized, ranging from
mutualistic exudate-consuming bacteria that are associated with fungal
surfaces to endosymbiotic and mycophagous bacteria. In some cases,
there are indications of fungal specific selection in fungus-associated
bacteria, and possible mechanisms for such selection are discussed.
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