Fungal data of leafless epiphytic orchids
Data files
Sep 01, 2021 version files 180.75 KB
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1_Ceratobasidiaceae.fasta
47.06 KB
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2_Ceratobasidiaceae.tree
6.78 KB
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3_OTU_abundance_data.xlsx
104.67 KB
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readme.docx
22.24 KB
Abstract
This dataset contains fungal phylogenetic and community data from the paper: “Qin, Jiao; Zhang, Wei; Feng, Jing‑Qiu; Zhang, Shi‑Bao (2021), Leafless epiphytic orchids share Ceratobasidiaceae mycorrhizal fungi. Mycorrhiza. https://doi.org/10.1007/s00572-021-01043-4”. One sequence matrix and the relevant phylogenetic tree were displayed to show the relationships among fungi of Ceratobasidiaceae. The sequence abundances of each mycorrhizal fungal OTU detected from different samples, together with the sampling information, were listed in the uploaded excel.
The fungal amplicons of orchid mycorrhizas were sequenced by using primer pairs ITS3/ITS4OF and ITS86/ITS4 on MiSeq PE-250 platforms. The obtained clean reads were clustered into operational taxonomic units (OTUs) at a 97% identity threshold using the UPARSE-OTU algorithm. The representative sequence of each OTU was annotated using UNITE database (Feb 2020).The OTU abundance tables were generated from all the merged sequences and OTUs, and were then filtered by excluding OTUs with a low sequence abundance and homogenized using rarefaction.py in Qiime 2 according to the lowest sequence abundance in all samples (22,044 reads). The OTU abundance data merged from sequencings of two different primer pairs was deposited in Dryad Data Repository. Phylogenetic analyses of three“rhizoctonia”fungal lineages (Ceratobadiaceae, Tulasnellaceae, and Sebacinales) and Psathyrellaceae were carried out using Maximum Likelihood (ML). The relevant sequence matrixes (aligned using Mafft) and the ML trees were also provided here. These data has been processed to produce a MS published in Mycorrhiza.
More detailed information of each fungal OTU can be found in the referenced manuscript and readme file.