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Diversity and function of fungi associated with the fungivorous millipede, Brachycybe lecontii

Fungivorous millipedes (subterclass Colobognatha) likely represent some of the earliest known mycophagous terrestrial arthropods, yet their fungal associates remain elusive. Here we describe relationships between fungi and the fungivorous millipede, Brachycybe lecontii. Their fungal community is sur...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Fungal ecology 2019-10, Vol.41, p.187-197
Main Authors: Macias, Angie M., Marek, Paul E., Morrissey, Ember M., Brewer, Michael S., Short, Dylan P.G., Stauder, Cameron M., Wickert, Kristen L., Berger, Matthew C., Metheny, Amy M., Stajich, Jason E., Boyce, Greg, Rio, Rita V.M., Panaccione, Daniel G., Wong, Victoria, Jones, Tappey H., Kasson, Matt T.
Format: Article
Language:English
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Summary:Fungivorous millipedes (subterclass Colobognatha) likely represent some of the earliest known mycophagous terrestrial arthropods, yet their fungal associates remain elusive. Here we describe relationships between fungi and the fungivorous millipede, Brachycybe lecontii. Their fungal community is surprisingly diverse, including 176 genera, 39 orders, four phyla, and several undescribed species. Of particular interest are twelve genera conserved across wood substrates and millipede clades that comprise the core fungal community of B. lecontii. Wood decay fungi, long speculated to serve as the primary food source for Brachycybe species, were absent from this core assemblage and proved lethal to millipedes in pathogenicity assays while entomopathogenic Hypocreales were more common in the core but had little effect on millipede health. This study represents the first survey of fungal communities associated with any colobognath millipede, and these results offer a glimpse into the complexity of millipede fungal communities. •Diverse fungal community associated with the millipede, Brachycybe lecontii.•Known entomopathogenic fungi from B. lecontii caused little to no mortality.•Polyporales, long speculated to serve as food source, are rare and pathogenic.•Several novel species of fungi associated with B. lecontii.
ISSN:1754-5048
1878-0083
DOI:10.1016/j.funeco.2019.06.006