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Dam, Hans G. (Ed.)Recent research has revealed the diversity and biomass of life across ecosystems, but how that biomass is distributed across body sizes of all living things remains unclear. We compile the present-day global body size-biomass spectra for the terrestrial, marine, and subterranean realms. To achieve this compilation, we pair existing and updated biomass estimates with previously uncatalogued body size ranges across all free-living biological groups. These data show that many biological groups share similar ranges of body sizes, and no single group dominates size ranges where cumulative biomass is highest. We then propagate biomass and size uncertainties and provide statistical descriptions of body size-biomass spectra across and within major habitat realms. Power laws show exponentially decreasing abundance (exponent -0.9±0.02 S.D.,R2= 0.97) and nearly equal biomass (exponent 0.09±0.01,R2= 0.56) across log size bins, which resemble previous aquatic size spectra results but with greater organismal inclusivity and global coverage. In contrast, a bimodal Gaussian mixture model describes the biomass pattern better (R2= 0.86) and suggests small (~10−15g) and large (~107g) organisms outweigh other sizes by one order magnitude (15 and 65 Gt versus ~1 Gt per log size). The results suggest that the global body size-biomass relationships is bimodal, but substantial one-to-two orders-of-magnitude uncertainty mean that additional data will be needed to clarify whether global-scale universal constraints or local forces shape these patterns.more » « less
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Ke, Yi-Hong; Branco, Sara; Bazzicalupo, Anna L; Nguyen, Nhu H; Liao, Hui-Ling; Kennedy, Peter; Bruns, Thomas D; Kuo, Alan; LaButti, Kurt; Barry, Kerrie; et al (, GENETICS)Stajich, J (Ed.)Abstract Studying the signatures of evolution can help to understand genetic processes. Here, we demonstrate how the existence of balancing selection can be used to identify the breeding systems of fungi from genomic data. The breeding systems of fungi are controlled by self-incompatibility loci that determine mating types between potential mating partners, resulting in strong balancing selection at the loci. Within the fungal phylum Basidiomycota, two such self-incompatibility loci, namely HD MAT locus and P/R MAT locus, control mating types of gametes. Loss of function at one or both MAT loci results in different breeding systems and relaxes the MAT locus from balancing selection. By investigating the signatures of balancing selection at MAT loci, one can infer a species’ breeding system without culture-based studies. Nevertheless, the extreme sequence divergence among MAT alleles imposes challenges for retrieving full variants from both alleles when using the conventional read-mapping method. Therefore, we employed a combination of read-mapping and local de novo assembly to construct haplotypes of HD MAT alleles from genomes in suilloid fungi (genera Suillus and Rhizopogon). Genealogy and pairwise divergence of HD MAT alleles showed that the origins of mating types predate the split between these two closely related genera. High sequence divergence, trans-specific polymorphism, and the deeply diverging genealogy confirm the long-term functionality and multiallelic status of HD MAT locus in suilloid fungi. This work highlights a genomics approach to studying breeding systems regardless of the culturability of organisms based on the interplay between evolution and genetics.more » « less
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