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orchid-ecology

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Differences in orchid mycorrhizal diversity between terrestrial and epiphytic habitats on Yakushima Island, Japan.

PubMed · 2026-05-13

Researchers on a Japanese island found that orchids living on tree bark and those growing in soil rely on different fungal partners, yet some key fungi are shared between both habitats — suggesting these fungi helped orchids make the evolutionary leap from ground to canopy.

1

Epiphytic (tree-dwelling) orchids and terrestrial (ground-dwelling) orchids host distinct mycorrhizal fungal communities, and the bark and soil substrates they grow in also differ in fungal composition.

2

Overall fungal richness was lower in bark than in soil, but the diversity of rhizoctonia fungi — the main group orchids rely on — was similarly high in both habitats.

3

Some rhizoctonia fungi were found in both epiphytic and terrestrial orchids and were confirmed to form successful partnerships with orchids from both habitats in laboratory culture, suggesting they acted as a bridge enabling canopy colonization.

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