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A diverse and partially cellulolytic fungal community contributes to the diet of three species of the aquatic insect Phylloicus (Trichoptera: Calamoceratidae) in Amazonian streams

Abstract

Investigations on the fungal community associated with the digestive tract (DT) of insects have provided insights into the diversity of associated microorganisms and their potential roles in the interaction with their hosts. However, most studies have focused on terrestrial insects, with few studies focusing on aquatic insects in Neotropical regions. We studied fungal taxa associated with the DT of larval stages of the aquatic shredders Phylloicus amazonas, P. elektoros and P. fenestratus in the Brazilian Amazon Forest. Filamentous fungi were isolated, purified and screened for cellulolytic activity. A total of 33 fungal taxa was identified through the combination of classical and molecular taxonomy. The genus Penicillium was the most frequent in DT of Phylloicus spp. (18.75%). The occurrence of fungal taxa among hosts was quite variable, with more than half of the associated fungi being exclusive of each host species. A significant portion of the fungal community associated with each host presented cellulolytic activity (± 50%). It was concluded that the fungal community associated with Phylloicus spp. larvae consist mainly of fungal taxa from food items, which come from riparian vegetation (whose plant species are variable) or are indigenous of the aquatic ecosystems, which is the habitat of these larvae.

Key words
Aquatic macroinvertebrates; cellulolytic fungi; digestive tract; fungal diversity; fungus-insect interaction

INTRODUCTION

The digestive tract (DT) of insects has been revealed as a hotspot for diversity studies and for understanding the symbiotic relationships between fungi and insects (Suh et al. 2005SUH S-O, MCHUGH JV, POLLOCK DD & BLACKWELL M. 2005. The beetle gut: a hyperdiverse source of novel yeasts. Mycol Res 109: 261-265., Nguyen et al. 2006NGUYEN NH, SUH S-O, MARSHALL CJ & BLACKWELL M. 2006. Morphological and ecological similarities: wood-boring beetles associated with novel xylose-fermenting yeasts, Spathaspora passalidarum gen. sp. nov. and Candida jeffriesii sp. nov. Mycol Res 110: 1232-1241., Lichtwardt 2012LICHTWARDT RW. 2012. Trichomycete gut fungi from tropical regions of the world. Biodivers Conserv 21: 2397-2402.). New records of occurrence, as well as the discovery of new fungal taxa, have been possible from the exploitation of this habitat (Suh & Zhou 2011SUH SO & ZHOU JJ. 2011. Kazachstania intestinalis sp. nov., an ascosporogenous yeast from the gut of passalid beetle Odontotaenius disjunctus. Anton Leeuw Int J G 100: 109-115., Misra et al. 2014MISRA JK, PAPP T, CSERNETICS Á & VÁGVÖLGYI C. 2014. A new species of Legeriomyces and other Harpellales reported for the first time in larval insects from Hungary. Mycoscience 55: 268-274., Oliveira et al. 2014OLIVEIRA JVC, BORGES TA, SANTOS RAC, FREITAS LFD, ROSA CA, GOLDMAN GH & RIAÑO-PACHÓN DM. 2014. Pseudozyma brasiliensis sp. nov., a xylanolytic, ustilaginomycetous yeast species isolated from an insect pest of sugarcane roots. Int J Syst Evol Microbiol 64: 2159-2168., Handel et al. 2016HANDEL S, WANG T, YURKOV AM & KÖNIG H. 2016. Sugiyamaella mastotermitis sp. nov. and Papiliotrema odontotermitis f.a., sp. nov. from the gut of the termites Mastotermes darwiniensis and Odontotermes obesus. Int J Syst Evol Microbiol 66: 4600-4608.). In addition, the functional characterization of the fungal organisms from DT of insects has contributed to the understanding of their roles in the interaction with their hosts (León et al. 2016LEÓN AV-P, SANCHEZ-FLORES A, ROSENBLUETH M & MARTÍNEZ-ROMERO E. 2016. Fungal community associated with Dactylopius (Hemiptera: Coccoidea: Dactylopiidae) and its role in uric acid metabolism. Front Microbiol 7: 1-15., Stefani et al. 2016STEFANI FOP, KLIMASZEWSKI J, MORENCY M-J, BOURDON C, LABRIE P, BLAIS M, VENIER L & SÉGUIN A. 2016. Fungal community composition in the gut of rove beetles (Coleoptera: Staphylinidae) from the Canadian boreal forest reveals possible endosymbiotic interactions for dietary needs. Fungal Ecol 23: 164-171.). It also generated insights for potential biotechnological applications, such as selecting fungal strains producing enzymes of industrial interest (Suh et al. 2013SUH S-O, HOUSEKNECHT JL, GUJJARI P & ZHOU JJ. 2013. Scheffersomyces parashehatae f.a., sp. nov., Scheffersomyces xylosifermentans f.a., sp. nov., Candida broadrunensis sp. nov. and Candida manassasensis sp. nov., novel yeasts associated with wood-ingesting insects, and their ecological and biofuel implications. Int J Syst Evol Microbiol 63: 4330-4339.).

The insect microbiome can influence nutrition, physiology, immunity and behavior of insects (Douglas 2015DOUGLAS AE. 2015. Multiorganismal insects: diversity and function of resident microorganisms. Annu Rev Entomol 60: 17-34., Chen et al. 2016CHEN B, TEH BS, SUN C, HU S, LU X, BOLAND W & SHAO Y. 2016. Biodiversity and activity of the gut microbiota across the life history of the insect herbivore Spodoptera littoralis. Sci Rep 6: 1-14.). Studies involving the microbiome of these organisms have revealed that the hosts’ diet can influence the microbial composition of their DTs (Majumder et al. 2019MAJUMDER R, SUTCLIFFE B, TAYLOR PW & CHAPMAN TA. 2019. Next-Generation Sequencing reveals relationship between the larval microbiome and food substrate in the polyphagous Queensland fruit fly. Sci Rep 9: 1-12., Przemieniecki et al. 2020PRZEMIENIECKI SW, KOSEWSKA A, CIESIELSKI S & KOSEWSKA O. 2020. Changes in the gut microbiome and enzymatic profile of Tenebrio molitor larvae biodegrading cellulose, polyethylene and polystyrene waste. Environ Pollut 256: 1-9.). Insects that feed on woody substrates or leaf debris (e.g., termites, wood roaches, scarab beetle larvae) generally have some type of relationship with cellulolytic microorganisms, which contribute to the degradation of the cell wall of the plant material consumed (Douglas 2015DOUGLAS AE. 2015. Multiorganismal insects: diversity and function of resident microorganisms. Annu Rev Entomol 60: 17-34.). However, most studies on such cellulolytic microorganisms in the insect microbiome have been related to bacteria and terrestrial insects (Hatefi et al. 2017HATEFI A, MAKHDOUMI A, ASOODEH A & MIRSHAMSI O. 2017. Characterization of a bi-functional cellulase produced by a gut bacterial resident of Rosaceae branch borer beetle, Osphranteria coerulescens (Coleoptera: Cerambycidae). Int J Biol Macromol 103: 158-164., Shelomi et al. 2019SHELOMI M, LIN SS & LIU LY. 2019. Transcriptome and microbiome of coconut rhinoceros beetle (Oryctes rhinoceros) larvae. BMC Genomics 20: 1-13., Callegari et al. 2020CALLEGARI M, JUCKER C, FUSI M, LEONARDI MG, DAFFONCHIO D, BORIN S, SAVOLDELLI S & CROTTI E. 2020. Hydrolytic profile of the culturable gut bacterial community associated with Hermetia illucens. Front Microbiol 11: 1-13., Wang et al. 2020WANG J-M, BAI J, ZHENG FY, LING Y, LI X, WANG J, ZHI Y-C & LI X-J. 2020. Diversity of the gut microbiome in three grasshopper species using 16S rRNA and determination of cellulose digestibility. PeerJ 8: 1-23.).

Most studies related to the DT of insects as a fungal habitat have focused mainly on terrestrial hosts such as beetles (Gama et al. 2006GAMA FC, TEIXEIRA CAD, GARCIA A, COSTA JNM & LIMA DKS. 2006. Diversidade de Fungos Filamentosos Associados a Hypothenemus hampei (Ferrari) (Coleoptera: Scolytidae) e suas Galerias em Frutos de Coffea canephora (Pierre). Neotrop Entomol 35: 573-578., Stefani et al. 2016STEFANI FOP, KLIMASZEWSKI J, MORENCY M-J, BOURDON C, LABRIE P, BLAIS M, VENIER L & SÉGUIN A. 2016. Fungal community composition in the gut of rove beetles (Coleoptera: Staphylinidae) from the Canadian boreal forest reveals possible endosymbiotic interactions for dietary needs. Fungal Ecol 23: 164-171.), flies (Broderick & Lemaitre 2012BRODERICK NA & LEMAITRE B. 2012. Gut-associated microbes of Drosophila melanogaster. Gut Microbes 3: 307-321., Ramírez-Camejo et al. 2017RAMÍREZ-CAMEJO LA, MALDONADO-MORALES G & BAYMAN P. 2017. Differential microbial diversity in Drosophila melanogaster: are fruit flies potential vectors of opportunistic pathogens? Int J Microbiol 2017: 1-6.) and termites (Schäfer et al. 1996SCHÄFER A, KONRAD R, KUHNIGK T, KÄMPFER P, HERTEL H & KÖNIG H. 1996. Hemicellulose degrading bacteria and yeasts from the termite gut. J Appl Bacteriol 80: 471-478., Handel et al. 2016HANDEL S, WANG T, YURKOV AM & KÖNIG H. 2016. Sugiyamaella mastotermitis sp. nov. and Papiliotrema odontotermitis f.a., sp. nov. from the gut of the termites Mastotermes darwiniensis and Odontotermes obesus. Int J Syst Evol Microbiol 66: 4600-4608.). Therefore, the knowledge about the interaction between aquatic insects and fungi is limited and restricted to the Trichomycetes class (Mucoromycota) associated with a small group of insects (White & Lichtwardt 2004WHITE MM & LICHTWARDT RW. 2004. Fungal symbionts (Harpellales) in Norwegian aquatic insect larvae. Mycologia 96: 891-910., Siri & Lastra 2010SIRI A & LASTRA CCL. 2010. Diversity of trichomycetes in larval flies from aquatic habitats in Argentina. Mycologia 102: 347-362., Misra et al. 2014MISRA JK, PAPP T, CSERNETICS Á & VÁGVÖLGYI C. 2014. A new species of Legeriomyces and other Harpellales reported for the first time in larval insects from Hungary. Mycoscience 55: 268-274.). Insects and fungi are involved in several ecological processes in aquatic ecosystems, such as the decomposition of plant debris (Graça 2001GRAÇA MAS. 2001. The role of invertebrates on leaf litter decomposition in streams – a review. Int Rev Hydrobiol 86: 383-393., Hieber & Gessner 2002HIEBER M & GESSNER MO. 2002. Contribution of stream detritivores, fungi, and bacteria to leaf breakdown based on biomass estimates. Ecology 83: 1026-1038., Krauss et al. 2011KRAUSS GJ, SOLÉ M, KRAUSS G, SCHLOSSER D, WESENBERG D & BÄRLOCHER F. 2011. Fungi in freshwaters: Ecology, physiology and biochemical potential. FEMS Microbiol Rev 35: 620-651.). In these ecosystems, fungal colonization affects the quality of plant debris, by increasing palatability and nutritional value, resulting in differences in performance (growth, survivorship and reproduction) of aquatic insects that feed on this organic matter (Arsuffi & Suberkropp 1989ARSUFFI TL & SUBERKROPP K. 1989. Selective feeding by shredders on leaf-colonizing stream fungi: comparison of macroinvertebrate taxa. Oecologia 79: 30-37., Chung & Suberkropp 2009CHUNG N & SUBERKROPP K. 2009. Contribution of fungal biomass to the growth of the shredder, Pycnopsyche gentilis (Trichoptera: Limnephilidae). Freshwater Biol 54: 2212-2224.). Various studies point for the importance of fungi in the diet and food preference of detritivorous aquatic insects, especially shredders (Graça et al. 2001GRAÇA MAS, CRESSA C, GESSNER M, FEIO M, CALLIES K & BARRIOS C. 2001. Food quality, feeding preferences, survival and growth of shredders from temperate and tropical streams. Freshwater Biol 46: 947-957., Canhoto et al. 2005CANHOTO C, GRAÇA MAS & BARLÖCHER F. 2005. Feeding preferences. In: GRAÇA M, BÄRLOCHER F & GESSNER MO (Eds), Methods to study litter decomposition – a practical guide. Dordrecht: Springer, p. 297-302., Graça & Cressa 2010GRAÇA MAS & CRESSA C. 2010. Leaf quality of some tropical and temperate tree species as food resource for stream shredders. Int Rev Hydrobiol 95: 27-41., Cornut et al. 2015CORNUT J, FERREIRA V, GONÇALVES AL, CHAUVET E & CANHOTO C. 2015. Fungal alteration of the elemental composition of leaf litter affects shredder feeding activity. Freshwater Biol 60: 1755-1771.). Among the aquatic shredder insects that occur in Brazil, Phylloicus spp. (Trichoptera: Calamoceratidae) is exceptionally diverse (Prather 2003PRATHER AL. 2003. Revision of the Neotropical caddisfly genus Phylloicus (Trichoptera: Calamoceratidae). Zootaxa 275: 1-214.), with many records of occurrence of Phylloicus species for the Brazilian Amazon and Atlantic Forests (Dumas & Nessimian 2010DUMAS LL & NESSIMIAN JL. 2010. A dwarfish new species of Phylloicus (Trichoptera: Calamoceratidae) from Southeastern Brazil. Zoologia 27: 309-312., Santos & Nessimian 2010SANTOS APM & NESSIMIAN JL. 2010. A remarkable new species of Phylloicus (Trichoptera: Calamoceratidae) from Central Amazonia, Brazil. Aquat Insects 32: 321-326., Quinteiro et al. 2011QUINTEIRO FB, CALOR AR & FROEHLICH CG. 2011. A new species of Phylloicus Müller, 1880 (Trichoptera: Calamoceratidae), from southeastern Brazil, including descriptions of larval and pupal stages. Zootaxa 2748: 38-46., Gama Neto et al. 2017GAMA NETO JL, PES AM & HAMADA N. 2017. Checklist and new species of caddisfly (Insecta: Trichoptera) from Roraima state, Brazil. Zootaxa 4338: 475-488., Souza-Holanda et al. 2020SOUZA-HOLANDA PM, PES AM & HAMADA N. 2020. Immature stages of three species and new records of five species of Phylloicus Müller (Trichoptera, Calamoceratidae) in the northern region of Brazil. Zootaxa 4851: 111-136.). One study recently reported the frequent occurrence of cultivable filamentous fungi in association with the DT of Phylloicus (presence in 94.9% of the DTs analyzed) from streams under different ecological landscapes in the Brazilian Amazon (Santos et al. 2018SANTOS TT, OLIVEIRA KA, VITAL MJS, COUCEIRO SRM & MORAIS PB. 2018. Filamentous fungi in the digestive tract of Phylloicus larvae (Trichoptera: Calamoceratidae) in streams of the Brazilian Amazon. Bol Mus Para Emílio Goeldi Cienc Nat 13: 317-325.). However, little is known about the taxonomic identity of the filamentous fungi associated with these shredders and the possible existence of species-specific interaction between these microorganisms and their hosts.

We performed the isolation and molecular identification of filamentous fungi associated with the DT of three Phylloicus species (P. amazonas Prather, P. elektoros Prather and P. fenestratus Flint) from two streams of a protected forest in the Brazilian Amazon, aiming to detect a species-specific relationship between these two groups. Collections were limited to these two streams in one location in order to avoid the effect of site/ecosystem in the distribution of fungi and insect species. We also tested the spectrum of cellulolytic activity of the fungal community as a possible benefit to the insect host by the digestion of plant food resources. We hypothesize that aquatic fungi and shredders have a symbiotic relationship in which fungi transform plant detritus in highly palatable and energy-rich food and the Phylloicus genus harbours specific fungal taxa that it selects from the fungal community of the highly diverse habitat of low order streams.

MATERIALS AND METHODS

Characterization of the study area

The sampling was carried out in the Tapajós National Forest, which is a biodiversity conservation unit located in the Pará state, Brazil, with vegetation classified as Dense Ombrophylous Forest (Veloso et al. 1991VELOSO HP, RANGEL FILHO ALR & LIMA JCA. 1991. Classificação da vegetação brasileira, adaptada a um sistema universal. Rio de Janeiro: IBGE.), characterized by the dominance of large arboreal individuals and by the abundance of woody lianas, palms and epiphytes. Low-order streams (stream I: 03°15’44.7”S; 54°57’22.0”W; stream II: 03°15’38.7”S; 54°56’42.8”W) (Fig. 1) were selected for collection. In each stream, a 50 m stretch was used to select the available substrate (especially foliage) at five points 10 m apart, with the aid of a D-frame net (0.500 mm mesh and 0.465 m2 area). At each point, three subsamples were collected, which were screened in the field to collect typical cases of Phylloicus spp. The collections were authorized by the Instituto Chico Mendes de Conservação da Biodiversidade (ICMBio) [Sistema de Autorização e Informação em Biodiversidade (SISBIO) license number 55136].

Figure 1
Map of the sites showing the low order streams and location in the Pará State, Brazil. Abbreviations: PA = Pará State; I and II = streams sampled.

Insect sampling and identification

The larvae of Phylloicus spp. were identified by associating their appearance and cases with descriptions of type specimens of each species occurring in the site. For this purpose, larvae were taken alive and brought to laboratory in flasks containing stream water and transferred to polystirene boxes for their maturation until adulthood. During the period, larvae were fed with leaves until adults emerged. These adults were identified to species level using the key of Prather (2003)PRATHER AL. 2003. Revision of the Neotropical caddisfly genus Phylloicus (Trichoptera: Calamoceratidae). Zootaxa 275: 1-214.. The larvae sampled for fungal isolation were differentiated through the shape and other characteristics of the cases (dimensions, format, composition and form of plant leaf material). Further on, the larvae’s carcasses were stored in 80% ethyl alcohol for identity confirmation through a comparative description of head capsule, spinules, mandibles and labrum and also by larval sclerites within the case by one of the authors (A.M. Pes).

Isolation, morphological characterization, purification and preservation of filamentous fungi

Under aseptic conditions, the larvae were carefully removed from the cases and individually subjected to surface disinfection (immersion in 70% ethyl alcohol for 30 seconds, washing with sterile distilled water abundantly). Then, with the aid of a stereoscopic microscope, the DT of each larvae was dissected for dispersion of the contents in 1.0 mL of sterile distilled water in 1.5 mL microtubes. After the homogenization of the contents, the inoculation of the DT content was done in triplicate of 100 μL aliquots in 90 mm diameter Petri dishes containing PDA (Potato Dextrose Agar) culture medium (potato extract: 4.0 g, dextrose: 20.0 g, agar: 15.0 g, distilled water: 1000 mL), supplemented with 0.1 μg.mL-1 chloramphenicol for inhibition of bacterial growth. Negative control of the larvae disinfection was performed by inoculating the final water of the disinfection procedure in the same culture media. Plates were incubated (25 ± 3°C) for three to ten days, being inspected daily, until fungal growth was detected, described and counted.

The fungal Colony-forming Units (CFU), from each DT, were grouped into different morphogroups (named morphotypes) according to their morphological characteristics (colony appearance, colour and type of mycelium) (Fröhlich et al. 2000FRÖHLICH J, HYDE KD & PETRINI O. 2000. Endophytic fungi associated with palms. Mycol Res 104: 1202-1212., Lacap et al. 2003LACAP DC, HYDE KD & LIEW ECY. 2003. An evaluation of the fungal ‘morphotype’ concept based on ribosomal DNA sequences. Fungal Divers 12: 53-66., Ibrahim et al. 2017IBRAHIM M, SIEBER TN & SCHLEGEL M. 2017. Communities of fungal endophytes in leaves of Fraxinus ornus are highly diverse. Fungal Ecol 29: 10-19.). The microculture technique was used to identify microscopic structures, following Kern & Blevins (1999)KERN ME & BLEVINS KS. 1999. Micologia Médica, 2ª ed., São Paulo: Premier, p. 256.. Formation of conidia was observed microscopically with lactophenol cotton blue staining (Seifert et al. 2011SEIFERT KA, MORGAN-JONES G, GAMS W & KENDRICK WB. 2011. The Genera of Hyphomycetes. [CBS Biodiversity Series no. 9.]. Utrecht: CBS- KNAW Fungal Biodiversity Centre.).

The CFU of each morphotype in each DT was counted for quantitative analysis. One to five representatives of different fungal morphotypes from each DT were purified by successive inoculation in PDA Ptri plates. The Castellani technique was used for preservation of pure cultures (Castellani 1939CASTELLANI A. 1939. Viability of some pathogenic fungi in distilled water. J Trop Med Hyg 24: 270-276.) in the Coleção de Culturas Microbianas Carlos Rosa/UFT for identification.

DNA extraction, amplification and sequencing

One to five representatives of each morphotype were inoculated in 2.0% ME broth (malt extract: 20.0 g, distilled water: 1000 mL) and cultured on shaker type oscillatory platform at 150 rpm, 25 ± 3°C, for three to five days. After this period, about 40 mg of mycelium was separated from the liquid medium and used for total DNA extraction using a Wizard™ Genomic DNA Purification Kit protocol (Promega Corp., Madison, WI), following a slightly modified protocol from that of Burghoorn et al. (2002)BURGHOORN HP, SOTEROPOULOS P, PADERU P, KASHIWAZAKI R & PERLIN DS. 2002. Molecular evaluation of the plasma membrane proton pump from Aspergillus fumigatus. Antimicrob Agents Chemother 46: 615-624.. After the extractions, the quantification and quality evaluation of the DNA was assessed with the NanoDrop 2000 spectrophotometer (Thermo Scientific, Uniscience, Brazil).

Amplification of the internal transcribed spacer (ITS) regions of the rDNA was performed in a thermocycler Mastercycler nexus (Eppendorf, São Paulo, Brazil) using a GoTaq DNA Polymerase kit (Promega Corp., Madison, WI). For this amplification, ITS1 (5’-TCCGTAGGTGAACCTGCGG-3’) and ITS4 (5’-TCCTCCGCTTATTGATATGC-3’) (White et al. 1990WHITE TJ, BURNS T, LEE S & TAYLOR J. 1990. Amplification and direct sequencing of fungal ribosomal RNA genes for phylogenetics. In: INNIS MA, GELFAND DH, SNINSKY JS & WHITE TJ (Eds), PCR Protocols: A Guide to Methods and Applications, New York: Academic Press, p. 315-322.) primers were used. Amplification reactions were performed according to Santos et al. (2016)SANTOS TT, SOUZA TL, QUEIROZ CB, ARAÚJO EF, PEREIRA OL & QUEIROZ MV. 2016. High genetic variability in endophytic fungi from the genus Diaporthe isolated from common bean (Phaseolus vulgaris L.) in Brazil. J Appl Microbiol 120: 388-401.. The amplification reaction was performed to a final volume of 25 μL containing 5.0 μl of Taq Polymerase buffer (5x); 2.5 μL MgCl2 (25 mmol); 1.0 μL of dNTPs (2.5 mmol each dNTP); 1.0 μL of the ITS1 primer (5 μmol); 1.0 μL of the ITS4 primer (5 μmol); 0.25 μL of the enzyme Taq Polymerase (5 U/μL), 5 μL of genomic DNA (10 ng.μL-1). Negative control (DNA replaced by ultrapure water) was used.

Amplified fragments were analyzed by 1% (w/v) agarose gel electrophoresis with GelRed™ (Biotium, Inc., Fremont, CA) in 1X TBE buffer (2 mmol EDTA, 0.1 mol Tris-HCl, and boric acid 0.1 mol [pH 8.0]) (Sambrook & Russell 2001SAMBROOK J & RUSSELL DW. 2001. Molecular Cloning: A Laboratory Manual, 3rd ed., New York: Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press.) and visualized with UV illumination by a photo documentation system LPIX EX (Loccus Biotechnology & Cotia, São Paulo, Brazil). The 1 Kb DNA Ladder (Promega Corp., Madison, WI) was used as a molecular weight marker. Subsequently, the PCR products of approx. 300–650 bp were purified using a Wizard™ SV Gel and PCR Clean-Up System kit (Promega Corp., Madison, WI) and bidirectionally sequenced according to the dideoxy chain-termination method (Sanger et al. 1977SANGER F, NICKLEN S & COULSON AR. 1977. DNA sequencing with chain-terminating inhibitors. Proc Natl Acad Sci USA 74: 5463-5467.) using a BigDye Terminator v 3.1 sequencing kit (Applied Biosystems, Foster City, CA). Sequencing was performed at Myleus Biotechnology, located in Belo Horizonte, Brazil (http://myleus.com/).

Identification of isolates

The nucleotide sequences generated from each individual were imported into the Geneious 6.1.8 program (Kearse et al. 2012KEARSE M ET AL. 2012. Geneious basic: an integrated and extendable desktop software platform for the organization and analysis of sequence data. Bioinformatics 28: 1647-1649.) to be checked, edited and aligned. Sequences of both DNA strands were pooled into contigs, manually corrected and aligned. The alignments were exported in a FASTA extension file (*.fasta/*.fas) for comparative research of sequence identity using the BLAST (Basic Local Alignment Search) tool (Altschul et al. 1990ALTSCHUL SF, GISH W, MILLER W, MYERS EW & LIPMAN DJ. 1990. Basic local alignment search tool. J Mol Biol 215: 403-410.) of the NCBI (National Center for Biotechnology Information) (GenBank database) and in the CBS (Centraalbureau voor Schimmelcultures Fungal Biodiversity Centre) database (http://www.cbs.knaw.nl/Collections/). Identity ≥ 99% were indicative of the identical species. The sequences were deposited in the GenBank database under the accession numbers MK120544 to MK120591 Supplementary Material (Table SI).

Phylogenetic analysis

Identical sequences from fungal taxa were treated as duplicates in phylogenetic analyses. The sequences representative of all taxa obtained in this study (36) and additional 36 sequences from GenBank were aligned using Clustal W (Thompson et al. 1994THOMPSON JD, HIGGINS DG & GIBSON TJ. 1994. CLUSTAL W: improving the sensitivity of progressive multiple sequence alignment through sequence weighting, position-specific gap penalties and weight matrix choice. Nucleic Acids Res 22: 4673-4680.) as implemented in software MEGA version 6.0 (Biodesign Institute, USA) and trimmed. A phylogenetic tree was constructed by the neighbor-joining method. The bootstrap was 1,000 replications to assess the reliable level to the nodes of the tree (Tamura et al. 2013TAMURA K, STECHER G, PETERSON D, FILIPSKI A & KUMAR S. 2013. MEGA6: molecular evolutionary genetics analysis version 6.0. Mol Biol Evol 30: 2725-2729.). A sequence of Rhizopus oryzae (Mucoromycota) from GenBank (AB381938) was used as outgroup as proposed in the phylogenetic analysis of filamentous fungi performed by Xiong et al. (2013)XIONG Z-Q, YANG Y-Y, ZHAO N & WANG Y. 2013. Diversity of endophytic fungi and screening of fungal paclitaxel producer from Anglojap yew, Taxus x media. BMC Microbiol 13: 1-10.. Sequences from this study were indicated in the tree by collection code, while GenBank sequences were indicated by accession numbers (Fig. 2 and Table SI).

Figure 2
Phylogenetic relationship between fungal taxa.

Evaluation of cellulolytic activity

As proposed by Sunitha et al. (2013)SUNITHA V, DEVI DN & SRINIVAS C. 2013. Extracellular enzymatic activity of endophytic fungal strains isolated from medicinal plants. World J Agricult Sci 9: 1-9., the pure strains were cultured in PDA for seven days. Then, fragments of mycelium (5 mm diameter) were removed from the colonies and transferred to Petri dishes containing CMC medium (carboxymethylcellulose: 5.0 g, glucose: 1.0 g, yeast extract: 0.1 g, peptone: 0.5 g, agar: 16.0 g, distilled water: 1000 mL). After three to five days of incubation at 28°C, the plates were flooded with 10 mL of 0.2% aqueous Congo red solution, which was maintained in contact with the plates for 30 min. This solution was then discarded and the plates were decolorized with 5.0 mL of 1.0 mol. L-1 NaCl solution, which was held in contact with the plates for 15 min and then discarded. The assay was performed in triplicate and the existence of degradation halo was indicative of positive cellulolytic activity, which was indicated in the letter “P” in Table I, whereas negative strains were indicated by “N” and fungal taxa that had positive and negative strains were indicated by the letter “V”, which means variable cellulolytic activity.

Table I
Identification, frequency of occurrence (Fo) and cellulolytic activity of fungal taxa isolated from the digestive tract of Phylloicus spp. (Trichoptera: Calamoceratidae) from Amazon Forest, Brazil.

Statistical analysis

For community analysis, data were expressed as the presence/absence of fungal taxa in insect DT (occurrence) (named as ni in Table I). Each strain isolated from a particular DT and identified as described above was counted as a representative of its fungal taxon in each DT where that fungal taxon was detected, not the counts of that taxon’s cells present in the DT. Excel software, version 2016 (Microsoft™), was used to calculate the frequency of occurrence (Fo), which corresponded to the percentage of DT in which the fungal taxon was found. Fo was calculated as follows: Fo = / N) x 100, where ni equals the number of occurrences of the fungal taxa “i” in the DT “j”; “N” is the total number of DT sampled.

The same Excel software was used to calculate the geometric mean and standard deviation of the Colony-forming Units per DT (CFU.DT-1) in order to analyse fungal populations in Phylloicus DT.

PAST software (version. 3.19) (Hammer et al. 2001HAMMER Ø, HARPER DAT & RYAN PD. 2001. PAST: Paleontological Statistics Software Package for Education and Data Analysis. Palaeo Electronica 4:1-9.) was used to compare the richness (Chao 1) of fungal taxa among hosts (P. amazonas, P. elektoros and P. fenestratus), diversity and equitability (J). The diversity was measured through the diversity indexes [Shannon (H’) and Margalef (d)]. The Shannon index (H’) assigns greater importance to less frequent (“rare”) fungal taxa in the sample. It is calculated as , where “pi” is the frequency of isolation of each fungal taxon, varying from 1 to S (species richness) (Shannon 1948SHANNON C. 1948. A mathematical theory of communication. Bell Syst Tech J 27: 379-423, 623-656.). The Margalef (d) index assigns greater importance to different fungal taxa in each sample. It is calculated as d = (n – 1)/ , where “n” equals the number of fungal rates present; “N” is the total of individuals found (Margalef 1958MARGALEF R. 1958. Temporal succession and spatial heterogeneity in phytoplankton. In: BUZZATI-TRAVERSO A (Ed), Perspectives in marine biology. Berkeley: Univ Calif Press, p. 323-347.). Equitability was measured by Pielou (J) (Pielou 1966PIELOU EC. 1966. The measurement of diversity in different types of biological collections. J Theor Biol 13: 131-144.), which verifies the distribution of the number of isolates between fungal taxa. The index is based on H’ and is calculated as follows: J’ = H’ (observed) / H’ max, where “H’ max” equals log S; “S” is the total number of fungal taxa.

The distribution pattern (restricted or shared) of fungal taxa among hosts was visualized in a Venn diagram, built through the web application Venn Diagrams (http://bioinformatics.psb.ugent.be/webtools/Venn/).

Excel software, version 2016 (Microsoft™), was also used to calculate the percentage of negative or positive fungal strains for cellulolytic activity of each host (P. amazonas, P. elektoros and P. fenestratus).

RESULTS

Fungal strains were obtained from all the shredders digestive tracts analyzed. The fungal CFU.DT-1 ranged from 1.7 x 101 to 2.1 x 103, with a geometric mean ± standard deviation of 3.9 ± 8.0 x 102 CFU.DT-1. A total of 33 fungal taxa was isolated from the DT of the three Phylloicus species, from which 22 species, corresponding to 16 genera, belonged to the phylum Ascomycota and one species to Mucoromycota (Table I). Eight taxa were identified only up to the genus level (all from the phylum Ascomycota). One Ascomycota (collection code: P9PC5A, Table SI) was identified only up to the family level (Bionectriaceae), and two ascomycetous isolates (collection codes: P10PC3 and P10PD3, Table SI) were identified only up to the order level (Pleosporales). The phylogenetic relationships among taxa are shown in Fig. 2.

Chaetonium cupreum was the fungal taxon that presented the highest count (903 UFC), followed by Epicoccum nigrum (877 CFU), Trichoderma sp. 2 (237 CFU) and Aspergillus oryzae (130 CFU). The genus Penicillium was the most frequent (18.75%) in DT of the three Phylloicus spp., followed by Pestalotiopsis and Trichoderma (10.42%, each). Pestalotiopsis microspora was the most frequent fungal species (10.42%), followed by Penicillium citrinum (6.25%). These two species were the only taxa shared among all species of Phylloicus studied here (Fig. 3). Other fungal species were isolated only once or two times during the present study. In addition to these two fungal taxa, Phylloicus amazonas and P. elektoros shared Penicillium paxilli and Trichoderma sp. 2. Chaetomium cupreum, Penicillium sp. and Tolypocladium album were shared among DT of P. elektoros and P. fenestratus. Phylloicus amazonas and P. fenestratus shared Aspergillus oryzae in addition to the two previously mentioned.

Figure 3
Venn diagram with the number of fungal taxa restricted to and shared by the three Phylloicus species sampled in Amazon Forest site Floresta Nacional do Tapajós, Pará-Brazil.

Diversity and equitability indexes are described in Table II. The diversity index was applied to indicate higher diversity as well as equitability (J) associated with DT of P. amazonas. The cellulolytic activity of the strains is shown in Table I. Almost half of all strains associated with the three Phylloicus species. (47.9%, n = 23/48) showed cellulolytic activity. Considering each host individually, it was observed that the percentage of positive strains was similar, with 57.1% (n = 8/14) in P. amazonas, 53.9% (n = 7/13) in P. elektoros, and 47.6% (n = 10/21) in P. fenestratus.

Table II
Richness, diversity indexes and equitability of fungal taxa associated with Phylloicus spp. (Trichoptera: Calamoceratidae).

DISCUSSION

The DT of the three Phylloicus spp. harbours a diverse community of fungi (33 fungal taxa) in the Amazon forest ecosystem. Fungal strains were obtained from all the digestive tracts analyzed in this study, contrasting with the low occurrence of yeasts (31%) verified by Santos et al. (2019)SANTOS TT, OLIVEIRA DP, CABETTE HSR & MORAIS PB. 2019. The digestive tract of Phylloicus (Trichoptera: Calamoceratidae) harbours different yeast taxa in Cerrado streams, Brazil. Symbiosis 77: 147-160. in association with the DT of Phylloicus spp. in Cerrado streams, in Brazil. Except for Umbelopsis isabellina, which belongs to the phylum Mucoromycota, all taxa associated with Phylloicus DT belong to Ascomycota. Similarly, the abundance of ascomycetous fungi was also higher than that of other phyla in the DT of rove beetles (Coleoptera: Staphylinidae) (Stefani et al. 2016STEFANI FOP, KLIMASZEWSKI J, MORENCY M-J, BOURDON C, LABRIE P, BLAIS M, VENIER L & SÉGUIN A. 2016. Fungal community composition in the gut of rove beetles (Coleoptera: Staphylinidae) from the Canadian boreal forest reveals possible endosymbiotic interactions for dietary needs. Fungal Ecol 23: 164-171.). On the other hand, Ascomycota was not prevalent in the DT of Dactylopius (Hemiptera: Coccoidea: Dactylopiidae) (León et al. 2016LEÓN AV-P, SANCHEZ-FLORES A, ROSENBLUETH M & MARTÍNEZ-ROMERO E. 2016. Fungal community associated with Dactylopius (Hemiptera: Coccoidea: Dactylopiidae) and its role in uric acid metabolism. Front Microbiol 7: 1-15.). A much larger variety of insects had their DT investigated for the presence of yeasts, among which the phylum Ascomycota was predominant (Blackwell & Jones 1997BLACKWELL M & JONES K. 1997. Taxonomic diversity and interactions of insect-associated ascomycetes. Biodivers Conserv 6: 689-699., Suh et al. 2005SUH S-O, MCHUGH JV, POLLOCK DD & BLACKWELL M. 2005. The beetle gut: a hyperdiverse source of novel yeasts. Mycol Res 109: 261-265.). Sung et al. (2008)SUNG GH, POINAR GO & SPATAFORA JW. 2008. The oldest fossil evidence of animal parasitism by fungi supports a Cretaceous diversification of fungal-arthropod symbioses. ‎Mol Phylogenetics Evol 49: 495-502. described Paleoophiocordyceps coccophagus, a fungal parasite of a scale insect from the Early Cretaceous (Upper Albian) that provides the oldest fossil evidence of animal parasitism by fungi. This finding supports a Jurassic origin of fungal–animal symbioses within Hypocreales (Sordariomycetes, Pezizomycotina, Ascomycota) during the Cretaceous, that occurred at the same time as insects and angiosperms diversified, raising a possible prevalence of Ascomycota as insect symbionts. Further investigation of fungal communities associated with DT from other insects may clarify whether or not Ascomycetous fungi prevail as symbionts with insects.

Ascomycota is known to dominate the early succession in decomposing leaves in streams. A work by Vorísková & Baldrian (2013)VORÍSKOVÁ J & BALDRIAN P. 2013. Fungal community on decomposing leaf litter undergoes rapid successional changes. ISME Journal 7: 477-486. showed that sequences assigned to the Ascomycota showed the highest relative abundances in green leaves fallen to stream and during the early stages of decomposition in streams. Fungi from the Ascomycota phylum also prevailed in the non-senescent (green) and senescent (red) leaves on the trees (88.5% and 99.5% of amplicons, respectively). These data are in accordance with previous culture-based studies on various trees (Osono 2002OSONO T. 2002. Phyllosphere fungi on leaf litter of Fagus crenata: occurrence, colonization, and succession. Can J Bot 80: 460-469., Santamaría & Bayman 2005SANTAMARÍA J & BAYMAN P. 2005. Fungal epiphytes and endophytes of coffee leaves (Coffea arabica). Microb Ecol 50: 1-8.) and the pyrosequencing analyses of live Quercus macrocarpa leaves (Jumpponen & Jones 2009JUMPPONEN A & JONES KL. 2009. Massively parallel 454 sequencing indicates hyperdiverse fungal communities in temperate Quercus macrocarpa phyllosphere. New Phytol 184: 438-448., 2010JUMPPONEN A & JONES KL. 2010. Seasonally dynamic fungal communities in the Quercus macrocarpa phyllosphere differ between urban and nonurban environments. New Phytol 186: 496-513.). Endophytes in plant leaves are prevalently Ascomycota (Rodriguez et al. 2009RODRIGUEZ RJ, WHITE JF, ARNOLD AE & REDMAN RS. 2009. Fungal endophytes: diversity and functional roles. New Phytol 182: 314-330.). As Phylloicus is a shredder feeding on coarse particulate organic matter (CPOM) composed primarily of leaves and wood debris, it is expected that Ascomycota fungi will prevail in its diet. It is possible to raise the hypothesis that Phyloicus prefers to feed on leaves recently fallen in the streams due to the prevalence of Ascomycetes.

Penicillium, Pestalotiopsis and Trichoderma were the most frequent isolated genera. The genus Penicillium have been detected from the DT of a wide variety of hosts, such as Rhodnius prolixus (Hemiptera: Reduviidae) (Moraes et al. 2004MORAES AML, JUNQUEIRA ACV, CELANO V, COSTA GL & COURA JR. 2004. Fungal flora of the digestive tract of Rhodnius prolixus, Rhodnius neglectus, Diptelanogaster maximus and Panstrongylus megistus, vectors of Trypanosoma cruzi, Chagas, 1909. Braz J Microbiol 35: 288-291.), Dactylopius coccus (León et al. 2016LEÓN AV-P, SANCHEZ-FLORES A, ROSENBLUETH M & MARTÍNEZ-ROMERO E. 2016. Fungal community associated with Dactylopius (Hemiptera: Coccoidea: Dactylopiidae) and its role in uric acid metabolism. Front Microbiol 7: 1-15.) and Drosophila melanogaster (Diptera: Drosophilidae) (Ramírez-Camejo et al. 2017RAMÍREZ-CAMEJO LA, MALDONADO-MORALES G & BAYMAN P. 2017. Differential microbial diversity in Drosophila melanogaster: are fruit flies potential vectors of opportunistic pathogens? Int J Microbiol 2017: 1-6.). In addition, it has also been verified from a wide variety of environments and substrates, such as plant hosts (Larran et al. 2007LARRAN S, PERELLÓ A, SIMÓN MR & MORENO V. 2007. The endophytic fungi from wheat (Triticum aestivum L.). World J Microbiol Biotechnol 23: 565-572., Hanada et al. 2010HANADA RE, POMELLA AWV, COSTA HS, BEZERRA JL, LOGUERCIO LL & PEREIRA JO. 2010. Endophytic fungal diversity in Theobroma cacao (cacao) and T. grandiflorum (cupuaçu) trees and their potential for growth promotion and biocontrol of black-pod disease. Fungal Biol 114: 901-910.) and continental aquatic ecosystems (Krauss et al. 2011KRAUSS GJ, SOLÉ M, KRAUSS G, SCHLOSSER D, WESENBERG D & BÄRLOCHER F. 2011. Fungi in freshwaters: Ecology, physiology and biochemical potential. FEMS Microbiol Rev 35: 620-651., Sandberg et al. 2014SANDBERG DC, BATTISTA LJ & ARNOLD AE. 2014. Fungal endophytes of aquatic macrophytes: diverse host-generalists characterized by tissue preferences and geographic structure. Microb Ecol 67: 735-747.), which correspond respectively to the food source and habitat of Phylloicus larvae.

Fungal taxa from the genus Pestalotiopsis and Trichoderma have been detected in association with a smaller group of insects than the genus Penicillium. The genus Pestalotiopsis was detected in the DT of Diaphania pyloalis (Lepidoptera: Pyralididae) (Chen et al. 2018CHEN B, DU K, SUN C, VIMALANATHAN A, LIANG X, LI Y, WANG B, LU X, LI L & SHAO Y. 2018. Gut bacterial and fungal communities of the domesticated silkworm (Bombyx mori) and wild mulberry-feeding relatives. ISME J 12: 2252-2262.) and exoskeletons of Cydia ulicetana (Lepidoptera: Tortricidae) (Yamoah et al. 2008YAMOAH E, JONES EE, WELD RJ, SUCKLING DM, WAIPARA N, BOURDÔT GW, HEE AKW & STEWART A. 2008. Microbial population and diversity on the exoskeletons of four insect species associated with gorse (Ulex europaeus L.). Aust J Entomol 47: 370-379.), while Trichoderma was detected from DT of triatomines (Hemiptera: Reduviidae) (Moraes et al. 2004MORAES AML, JUNQUEIRA ACV, CELANO V, COSTA GL & COURA JR. 2004. Fungal flora of the digestive tract of Rhodnius prolixus, Rhodnius neglectus, Diptelanogaster maximus and Panstrongylus megistus, vectors of Trypanosoma cruzi, Chagas, 1909. Braz J Microbiol 35: 288-291.) and exoskeletons of Cydia ulicetana (Lepidoptera: Tortricidae) (Yamoah et al. 2008YAMOAH E, JONES EE, WELD RJ, SUCKLING DM, WAIPARA N, BOURDÔT GW, HEE AKW & STEWART A. 2008. Microbial population and diversity on the exoskeletons of four insect species associated with gorse (Ulex europaeus L.). Aust J Entomol 47: 370-379.). Along with Penicillium, representatives of both fungal taxa have been detected in association with plant hosts and from aquatic ecosystems (Orole & Adejumo 2011OROLE OO & ADEJUMO TO. 2011. Bacterial and fungal endophytes associated with grains and roots of maize. J Ecol Nat Environ 3: 298-303., Rocha et al. 2011ROCHA A, GARCIA D, UETANABARO APT, CARNEIRO RTO, ARAÚJO IS, MATTOS CRR & GÓES-NETO A. 2011. Foliar endophytic fungi from Hevea brasiliensis and their antagonism on Microcyclus ulei. Fungal Divers 47: 75-84., Rönsberg et al. 2013RÖNSBERG D, DEBBAB A, MÁNDI A, WRAY V, DAI H, KURTÁN T, PROKSCH P & ALY AH. 2013. Secondary metabolites from the endophytic fungus Pestalotiopsis virgatula isolated from the mangrove plant Sonneratia caseolaris. Tetrahedron Lett 54: 3256-3259., Liu et al. 2016LIU Y, ZACHOW C, RAAIJMAKERS JM & BRUIJN I. 2016. Elucidating the diversity of aquatic Microdochium and Trichoderma species and their activity against the fish pathogen Saprolegnia diclina. Int J Mol Sci 17: 1-15.), indicating that these fungal taxa may be acquired by Phylloicus from food items and/or surrounding environment.

The two fungi most frequently associated with the three Phylloicus species were Pestalotiopsis microspora (Fo = 10.42%) and Penicillium citrinum (6.25%). The fungus P. citrinum was isolated from internal parts of the body of aquatic mosquito larvae (Diptera: Culicidae) (Pereira et al. 2009PEREIRA ES, SARQUIS MIM, FERREIRA-KEPPLER RL, HAMADA N & ALENCAR YB. 2009. Filamentous fungi associated with mosquito larvae (Diptera: Culicidae) in municipalities of the Brazilian Amazon. Neotrop Entomol 38: 352-359.), while no previous reports of association with insects were found for P. microspora. The low frequency of isolation (n in Table I) and low counts in individual DT does not support a close association between these two fungal species and the larvae of Phylloicus. In a similar approach, Santos et al. (2019)SANTOS TT, OLIVEIRA DP, CABETTE HSR & MORAIS PB. 2019. The digestive tract of Phylloicus (Trichoptera: Calamoceratidae) harbours different yeast taxa in Cerrado streams, Brazil. Symbiosis 77: 147-160. could not find evidence of a close association between Phylloicus larvae and yeasts isolated from their DT in savanna streams of Northern Brazil.

Although the combination of classical and molecular taxonomic approaches has been used, it was not possible to identify all the fungal taxa up to the species level. However, the sequencing of the rDNA ITS regions, which is consolidated as a barcode sequence for the identification of filamentous fungi (Nilsson et al. 2008NILSSON RH, KRISTIANSSON E, RYBERG M & HALLENBERG N. 2008. Intraspecific ITS variability in the kingdom Fungi as expressed in the international sequence databases and its implications for molecular species identification. Evol Bioinform 4: 193-201., Gazis et al. 2011GAZIS R, REHNER S & CHAVERRI P. 2011. Species delimitation in fungal endophyte diversity studies and its implications in ecological and biogeographic inferences. ‎Mol Ecol 20: 3001-3013., Schoch et al. 2012SCHOCH C, SEIFERT K, HUNHNDORF S, ROBERT V, SPOUGE JL, LEVESQUE CA, CHEN W & CONSORTIUM FB. 2012. Nuclear ribosomal internal transcribed spacer (ITS) region as a universal DNA barcode marker for Fungi. Proc Natl Acad Sci USA 109: 6241-6246.), allowed the accurate identification, at the species or genus level, of the majority of isolates from this study. In addition, the phylogenetic analysis performed corroborates the taxonomic associations presented in Table I. The Bionectriaceae isolate of this study (collection code: P9PC5A, Table SI) present 98% similarity with a Bionectriaceae sp. MH267845 isolated from the inner bark of Micrandra spruceana (Baill.) R. Schult. in Peru. It groups robustly in the same clade of the species Gliomastix polychroma, which also belongs to the family Bionectriaceae (Fig. 2). Similarly, the Pleosporales isolates of this study (collection codes: P10PC3 and P10PD3, Table SI), named Pleosporales sp. in Table I, present a 99% similarity with Pleosporales sp. MH268068, isolated from the inner bark of Hevea guianensis Aubl. in Peru. They are grouped with other taxa belonging to the order Pleosporales (Arthopyrenia sp., Epicoccum nigrum, Letendraea helminthicola, Neooccultibambusa pandanicola, Paraconiothyrium sp. and Pyrenochaetopsis microspora) (Fig. 2).

Regarding the isolates identified up to the taxonomic level of genera in this study, only two (collection codes: P9PH7 and P10PD1, Table SI) presented less than 99% similarity with sequences from GenBank and/or CBS database. The isolate P10PD1 (named as Diaporthe sp. in Table I) showed phylogenetic proximity with Diaporthe sp. KU523580 (Fig. 2), isolated from soil in Brazil. On the other hand, the isolate P9PH7 (named as Ramichloridium sp. 2 in Table I) presented phylogenetic proximity with Ramichloridium sp. 1, from this study, and KU204638 (Fig. 2), isolated from inner tissues of Hirtella racemosa Lam., in Costa Rica.

The amplification and sequencing of additional genomic regions, such as partial sequences of translation elongation factor 1-α, calmodulin, β-tubulin genes, has been proposed to contribute to the taxonomic elucidation in case the standard barcode sequence (rDNA ITS regions) is not sufficient (Udayanga et al. 2012UDAYANGA D, LIU X, CROUS PW, MCKENZIE EHC, CHUKEATIROTE E & HYDE KD. 2012. A multi-locus phylogenetic evaluation of Diaporthe (Phomopsis). Fungal Divers 56: 157-171., Santos et al. 2016SANTOS TT, SOUZA TL, QUEIROZ CB, ARAÚJO EF, PEREIRA OL & QUEIROZ MV. 2016. High genetic variability in endophytic fungi from the genus Diaporthe isolated from common bean (Phaseolus vulgaris L.) in Brazil. J Appl Microbiol 120: 388-401.). This strategy may be used in future efforts of identification of the three isolates (collection code: P9PC5A, P10PC3 and P10PD3, Table SI) with incomplete identification (only order or family level, as previously mentioned).

All larvae of Phylloicus species from this study came from streams of the same ecological landscape (Amazon Forest), from a single geographical region of Brazil (Pará state). Although the number of Phylloicus specimens collected was not high, the expected richness was similar to the actual richness, indicating that the sampling effort was sufficient (Table II). There was variation in fungal richness, uniformity and diversity among hosts. The species richness (Chao 1) was higher for P. fenestratus than the other host species. However, the species of Phylloicus with greater diversity was P. amazonas (d = 2.80; H’= 2.44) compared to P. fenestratus (d = 2.09; H’ = 1.37) and P. elektoros (d = 2.05; H ‘= 1.32), as indicated by the Margalef (d) and Shannon (H’) indexes, whose values are sensitive to the fungal richness calculated for each host.

The occurrence of fungi in DT of Phylloicus has not yet been reported for these Amazonian species. Ceneviva-Bastos et al. (2017)CENEVIVA-BASTOS M, PRATES DB, ROMERO RM, BISPO PC & CASATTI L. 2017. Trophic guilds of EPT (Ephemeroptera, Plecoptera, and Trichoptera) in three basins of the Brazilian Savanna. Limnologica 63: 11-17. have reported the main food items in guts of the trophic guilds of Ephemeroptera, Plecoptera and Trichoptera in three basins of Brazilian Savanna. Fungi were considered important food items for the Ephemeroptera Leptohyphes, Miroculis and the Trichoptera Grumichella but not for the coarse detritivore Phylloicus that presented the most flexible trophic guild, and was classified as an omnivore (Ceneviva-Bastos et al. 2017CENEVIVA-BASTOS M, PRATES DB, ROMERO RM, BISPO PC & CASATTI L. 2017. Trophic guilds of EPT (Ephemeroptera, Plecoptera, and Trichoptera) in three basins of the Brazilian Savanna. Limnologica 63: 11-17.). It is usually accepted that stream macroinvertebrates exhibit plasticity in their feeding habitats, being considered generalists in many cases (Friberg & Jacobsen 1994FRIBERG N & JACOBSEN D. 1994. Feeding plasticity of two detrivore-shredders. Freshwater Biol 32: 133-142., Mihuc & Minshall 1995MIHUC TB & MINSHALL GW. 1995. Trophic generalists vs. trophic specialists: implications for food web dynamics in post-fire streams. Ecology 76: 2361-2372., Carvalho & Graça 2007CARVALHO EM & GRAÇA MAS. 2007. A laboratory study on feeding plasticity of the shredder Sericostoma vittatum Rambur (Sericostomatidae). Hydrobiologia 575: 353-359., Moretti et al. 2009MORETTI MS, LOYOLA RD, BECKER B & CALLISTO M. 2009. Leaf abundance and phenolic concentrations codetermine the selection of case-building materials by Phylloicus sp. (Trichoptera, Calamoceratidae). Hydrobiologia 630: 199-206.). In general, Phylloicus larvae are usually considered typical shredders, and one expects to find a predominance of CPOM, which is defined as leaf fragments and wood debris but also includes fungal cells in accordance with Cummins & Klug (1979)CUMMINS KW & KLUG MJ. 1979. Feeding ecology of stream invertebrates. Annu Rev Ecol Evol Syst 10: 147-172., in the DT of the larvae. Ferreira et al. (2015)FERREIRA WR, LIGEIRO R, MACEDO DR, HUGHES RM, KAUFMANN PR, OLIVEIRA LG & CALLISTO M. 2015. Is the diet of a typical shredder related to the physical habitat of headwater streams in the Brazilian Cerrado? Ann Limnol Int J Lim 51: 115-127. found that fine particulate organic matter (FPOM) [defined as particles from 0.5 m to 1.0 mm] predominated in all instars of Phylloicus. They suggest that Phylloicus larvae exhibited plasticity in their dietary behavior. Cummins & Klug (1979)CUMMINS KW & KLUG MJ. 1979. Feeding ecology of stream invertebrates. Annu Rev Ecol Evol Syst 10: 147-172. included fungal cells and spores in FPOM. In the studies of Palmer et al. (1993)PALMER C, O’KEEFFE J, PALMER A, DUNNE T & RADLOFF S. 1993. Macroinvertebrate functional feeding groups in the middle and lower reaches of the Buffalo River eastern Cape, South Africa. I. Dietary variability. Freshwater Biol 29: 441-453., Tomanova et al. (2006)TOMANOVA S, GOITIA E & HELESIC J. 2006. Trophic levels and functional feeding groups of macroinvertebrates in neotropical streams. Hydrobiologia 556: 251-264., Chará-Serna et al. (2012)CHARÁ-SERNA AM, CHARÁ JD, ZÚÑIGA MDC, PEARSON RG & BOYERO L. 2012. Diets of leaf litter-associated invertebrates in three tropical streams. Ann Limnol-Int J Lim 48: 139-144., Callisto & Graça (2013)CALLISTO M & GRAÇA MAS. 2013. The quality and availability of fine particulate organic matter for collector species in headwater streams. Int Rev Hydrobiol 98: 132-140. and studies reviewed by these authors, FPOM was the most important food resource for the leaf litter-associated insect community. FPOM is primarily generated from the decomposition of CPOM by shredders, microorganisms and physical abrasion (Allan 1995ALLAN JD. 1995. Stream ecology: structure and function of running waters. Dordrecht, Neth.: Kluwer, 388 p.) and constitutes a mostly continuous resource in the streams, and its high availability may explain its ubiquity in the guts of leaf litter-associated invertebrates in the habitat. In a study in Southeastern Brazil, Carvalho & Uieda (2009)CARVALHO EM & UIEDA VS. 2009. Diet of invertebrates sampled in leaf-bags incubated in a tropical headwater stream. Zoologia 26: 694-704. showed that Phylloicus sp. consumed mostly CPOM and can be classified as the unique specialist shredder in that ecosystem. What emerges from those works is the great variability in the feeding behavior of Phylloicus and the rarity of data on the presence of fungi associated with their diets.

One could argue that the larvae are probably feeding on fungal cells among particles ingested at random and the fungi found in their DT are the most abundant in the environment. Nevertheless, the fungi presenting the highest counts were not the most frequently isolated. Chaetonium cupreum presented 903 CFU in the one larval specimen it was isolated; Epicoccum nigrum also presented a high count of 877 CFU in the one DT it was isolated, whereas the counts of frequent Pestalotiopsis microspora were 5 to 17 CFU per DT in the five hosts it was found. Santos et al. (2018)SANTOS TT, OLIVEIRA KA, VITAL MJS, COUCEIRO SRM & MORAIS PB. 2018. Filamentous fungi in the digestive tract of Phylloicus larvae (Trichoptera: Calamoceratidae) in streams of the Brazilian Amazon. Bol Mus Para Emílio Goeldi Cienc Nat 13: 317-325. showed that the fungal counts varied from 5.7 ± 24.9 x 101 CFU.DT-1 (in the Cerrado [Savanna in Central Brazil]) to 1.1 ± 2.2 x 102 CFU.DT-1 (in the Lavrado [Savanna in Northern Brazil]) and 1.9 ± 7.1 x 102 CFU.DT-1 (in the Amazon forest). This indicates that for those two particular fungal species, C. cupreum and E. nigrum and also for Trichoderma sp. 2 (237 CFU.DT-1) and A. oryzae (130 CFU.DT-1), counts are exceedingly higher than for other fungal species and even for whole counts in the study of Santos et al. (2018)SANTOS TT, OLIVEIRA KA, VITAL MJS, COUCEIRO SRM & MORAIS PB. 2018. Filamentous fungi in the digestive tract of Phylloicus larvae (Trichoptera: Calamoceratidae) in streams of the Brazilian Amazon. Bol Mus Para Emílio Goeldi Cienc Nat 13: 317-325.. Since we hypothesize that a degree of choice can be found in ingestion of fungi by Phylloicus larvae in Amazonian streams.

The composition of the fungal community was different among the host species. The number of fungal taxa with occurrence restricted to one host species was much higher than the total of species shared between two or more hosts. These findings lead to the hypothesis that Phylloicus larvae of the three species have different food preferences and may choose leaves from different plant species colonized by those particular fungi found in their DT and a possible feeding preference for the leaf species and not for the fungal species. Several works show different fungal communities in leaves of different plant species in streams (Vorísková & Baldrian 2013VORÍSKOVÁ J & BALDRIAN P. 2013. Fungal community on decomposing leaf litter undergoes rapid successional changes. ISME Journal 7: 477-486., Medina-Villar et al. 2015MEDINA-VILLAR S, ALONSO Á, ALDANA BRV, PÉREZ-CORONA E & CASTRO-DÍEZ P. 2015. Decomposition and biological colonization of native and exotic leaf litter in a Central Spain stream. Limnetica 34: 293-310.). Riparian vegetation is composed of various plant species (Afonso et al. 2000AFONSO AAO, HENRY R & RODELLA RCSM. 2000. Allochthonous matter input in two different stretches of a headstream (Itatinga, São Paulo, Brazil). Braz Arch Biol Technol 43: 335-343., França et al. 2009FRANÇA JS, GREGORIO RS, PAULA JDA, GONÇALVES JUNIOR JF, FERREIRA FA & CALLISTO M. 2009. Composition and dynamics of allochthonous organic matter inputs and benthic stock in a Brazilian stream. Mar Freshw Res 60: 990-998., Bambi et al. 2017BAMBI P, SOUZA REZENDE R, FEIO MJ, LEITE GFM, ALVIN E, QUINTÃO JMB, ARAÚJO F & GONÇALVES JÚNIOR JF. 2017. Temporal and spatial patterns in inputs and stock of organic matter in savannah streams of central Brazil. Ecosystems 20: 757-768., Rezende et al. 2017REZENDE RS, SALES MA, HURBATH F, ROQUE N, GONÇALVES JF & MEDEIROS AO. 2017. Effect of plant richness on the dynamics of coarse particulate organic matter in a Brazilian Savannah stream. Limnologica 63: 57-64.), which results in the simultaneous input of leaves of different species to the streams. The fungal colonization of these leaves can be influenced by several factors, including chemical properties and physical structure of the leaf surface (Dang et al. 2007DANG CK, GESSNER MO & CHAUVET E. 2007. Influence of conidial traits and leaf structure on attachment success of aquatic hyphomycetes on leaf litter. Mycologia 99: 24-32., Ardón & Pringle 2008ARDÓN M & PRINGLE CM. 2008. Do secondary compounds inhibit microbial- and insect-mediated leaf breakdown in a tropical rainforest stream, Costa Rica?. Oecologia 155: 311-323., Lecerf & Chauvet 2008LECERF A & CHAUVET E. 2008. Intraspecific variability in leaf traits strongly affects alder leaf decomposition in a stream. Basic Appl Ecol 9: 598-605., Ferreira et al. 2012FERREIRA V, ENCALADA AC & GRAÇA MAS. 2012. Effects of litter diversity on decomposition and biological colonization of submerged litter in temperate and tropical streams. Freshw Sci 31: 945-962.), efficient attachment of conidia to a suitable substrate (specifically in the case of aquatic hyphomycetes) (Dang et al. 2007DANG CK, GESSNER MO & CHAUVET E. 2007. Influence of conidial traits and leaf structure on attachment success of aquatic hyphomycetes on leaf litter. Mycologia 99: 24-32.), replacement of native riparian vegetation by exotic vegetation (Medina-Villar et al. 2015MEDINA-VILLAR S, ALONSO Á, ALDANA BRV, PÉREZ-CORONA E & CASTRO-DÍEZ P. 2015. Decomposition and biological colonization of native and exotic leaf litter in a Central Spain stream. Limnetica 34: 293-310., Gomes et al. 2016GOMES PP, MEDEIROS AO & GONÇALVES JÚNIOR JF. 2016. The replacement of native plants by exotic species may affect the colonization and reproduction of aquatic hyphomycetes. Limnologica 59: 124-130.), among others. This would lead to different fungal communities in leaves fallen in the same stream, and the diet of the three species of Phyloicus could reflect this diversity.

The diet of shredders may also vary with the life stage (Malas & Wallace 1977MALAS D & WALLACE JB. 1977. Strategies for coexistence in three species of net-spinning caddisflies (Trichoptera) in second-order southern Appalachian streams. Can J Zool 55: 1829-1840., Casas 1996CASAS JJ. 1996. The effect of diet quality on growth and development of recently hatched larvae of Chironomus gr. plumosus. Limnética 12: 1-8.). The strategies for coexistence in three species of caddisflies (Trichoptera) in second-order streams were studied by Malas & Wallace (1977)MALAS D & WALLACE JB. 1977. Strategies for coexistence in three species of net-spinning caddisflies (Trichoptera) in second-order southern Appalachian streams. Can J Zool 55: 1829-1840. and observed a greater proportion of fine particles in the early instars of two species (Dolophilodes sp. and Diplectrona sp.). One possible explanation for our findings of one single or two occurrences of the fungal species in DT of the sample could be that the larvae were from different stages of development, a condition we have not taken into consideration in the present work and it may be further investigated if Phylloicus spp. from the same habitat do coexist by partitioning of feeding niche, by selecting fungus species or leaf species in the stream.

This is a first report of the occurrence of Aspergillus oryzae, Chaetomium cupreum, Penicillium paxilli and Tolypocladium album in DT of an insect. The fungus Aspergillus oryzae was detected as an entomopathogenic fungus of the Locusta migratoria (Orthoptera: Acrididae) (Zhang et al. 2015ZHANG P, YOU Y, SONG Y, WANG Y & ZHANG L. 2015. First record of Aspergillus oryzae (Eurotiales: Trichocomaceae) as an entomopathogenic fungus of the locust, Locusta migratoria (Orthoptera: Acrididae). Biocontrol Sci Techn 25: 1285-1298.). This fungus and Chaetomium cupreum, Penicillium paxilli and Tolypocladium album have already been detected in associations with plant hosts and other sources (Phongpaichit et al. 2006PHONGPAICHIT S, RUNGJINDAMAI N, RUKACHAISIRIKUL V & SAKAYAROJ J. 2006. Antimicrobial activity in cultures of endophytic fungi isolated from Garcinia species. FEMS Immunol Med Microbiol 48: 367-372., Verma et al. 2007VERMA VC, GOND SK, KUMAR A, KHARWAR RN & STROBEL G. 2007. The endophytic mycoflora of bark, leaf, and stem tissues of Azadirachta indica A. Juss (Neem) from Varanasi (India). Microb Ecol 54: 119-125., Mao et al. 2010MAO B, HUANG C, YANG G, CHEN Y & CHEN S. 2010. Separation and determination of the bioactivity of oosporein from Chaetomium cupreum. Afr J Biotechnol 9: 5955-5961., Gazis et al. 2014GAZIS R, SKALTSAS D & CHAVERRI P. 2014. Novel endophytic lineages of Tolypocladium provide new insights into the ecology and evolution of Cordyceps-like fungi. Mycologia 106: 1090-1105.), with strains of P. paxilli and C. cupreum producing antimicrobial compounds (Phongpaichit et al. 2006PHONGPAICHIT S, RUNGJINDAMAI N, RUKACHAISIRIKUL V & SAKAYAROJ J. 2006. Antimicrobial activity in cultures of endophytic fungi isolated from Garcinia species. FEMS Immunol Med Microbiol 48: 367-372., Mao et al. 2010MAO B, HUANG C, YANG G, CHEN Y & CHEN S. 2010. Separation and determination of the bioactivity of oosporein from Chaetomium cupreum. Afr J Biotechnol 9: 5955-5961.). This suggests that the potential relationships between Phylloicus spp. and DT fungal community can go well beyond the presumed roles of metabolic symbiosis in which the fungi provide cellulolytic and xylanolytic enzymes for digestion of plant substrates by the insect, and may relate to immunity, protection of its hosts against pathogens and parasites, action on the detoxification of substances ingested by insects, among others (Dowd 1992DOWD PF. 1992. Insect fungal symbionts: a promising source of detoxifying enzymes. J Ind Microbiol 9: 149-161., Douglas 2015DOUGLAS AE. 2015. Multiorganismal insects: diversity and function of resident microorganisms. Annu Rev Entomol 60: 17-34.), which requires further research to clarify.

Insects require several exogenous dietary compounds, such as amino acids, vitamins, specific fatty acids and sterols (Vega & Dowd 2005VEGA FE & DOWD PF. 2005. The role of yeasts as insect endosymbionts. In: VEGA FE & BLACKWELL M (Eds), Insect-fungal associations: ecology and evolution. New York: Oxford University Press, p. 211-243., Douglas 2009DOUGLAS AE. 2009. The microbial dimension in insect nutritional ecology. Funct Ecol 23: 38-47.). Insect-associated fungi provide these food supplements to their hosts, such as B vitamins provided by fungi associated with beetles (Gusteleva 1975GUSTELEVA LA. 1975. Biosynthesis of vitamins of the B group by yeasts symbiotic on xylophageous insects. Mikrobiologiia 44: 45-47., Nardon & Grenier 1989NARDON P & GRENIER AM. 1989. Endosymbiosis in Coleoptera: biological, biochemical, and genetic aspects. In: SCHWEMMLER W & GASSNER G (Eds), Insect Endocytobiosis: morphology, physiology, genetics, evolution. Boca Raton: CRC Press, p. 175-216.), sterols yeasts for beetles, planthoppers and fire ant larvae (Ba et al. 1995BA AS, GUO D-A, NORTON RA, PHILLIPS JR SA & NES WD. 1995. Developmental differences in the sterol composition of Solenopsis invicta. Arch Insect Biochem Physiol 29: 1-9., Noda & Koizumi 2003NODA H & KOIZUMI Y. 2003. Sterol biosynthesis by symbiotes: Cytochrome P450 sterol C-22 desaturase genes from yeastlike symbiotes of rice planthoppers and anobiid beetles. Insect Biochem Mol Biol 33: 649-658.), as well as by-products and/or enzymes for the degradation of recalcitrant carbon sources such as cellulose or lignin (Hongoh & Ishikawa 2000HONGOH Y & ISHIKAWA H. 2000. Evolutionary studies on uricases of fungal endosymbionts of aphids and planthoppers. J Mol Evol 51: 265-277., Douglas 2009DOUGLAS AE. 2009. The microbial dimension in insect nutritional ecology. Funct Ecol 23: 38-47., Urubschurov & Janczyk 2011URUBSCHUROV V & JANCZYK P. 2011. Biodiversity of yeasts in the gastrointestinal ecosystem with emphasis on its importance for the host. In: GRILLO O & VENORA G (Eds), The dynamical processes of biodiversity-case studies of evolution and spatial distribution. Rijeka: InTech, p. 277-302., León et al. 2016LEÓN AV-P, SANCHEZ-FLORES A, ROSENBLUETH M & MARTÍNEZ-ROMERO E. 2016. Fungal community associated with Dactylopius (Hemiptera: Coccoidea: Dactylopiidae) and its role in uric acid metabolism. Front Microbiol 7: 1-15.). There are numerous records of fungi producing digestive enzymes to aid in insect host nutrition and detoxification of complex substrates (Shen & Dowd 1992SHEN SK & DOWD PF. 1992. Detoxifying enzymes and insect symbionts. J Chem Educ 69: 796-799., Schäfer et al. 1996SCHÄFER A, KONRAD R, KUHNIGK T, KÄMPFER P, HERTEL H & KÖNIG H. 1996. Hemicellulose degrading bacteria and yeasts from the termite gut. J Appl Bacteriol 80: 471-478., Gujjari et al. 2011GUJJARI P, SUH S-O, LEE C-F & ZHOU JJ. 2011. Trichosporon xylopini sp. nov., a hemicellulose-degrading yeast isolated from the wood-inhabiting beetle Xylopinus saperdioides. Int J Syst Evol Microbiol 61: 2538-2542., Suh et al. 2013SUH S-O, HOUSEKNECHT JL, GUJJARI P & ZHOU JJ. 2013. Scheffersomyces parashehatae f.a., sp. nov., Scheffersomyces xylosifermentans f.a., sp. nov., Candida broadrunensis sp. nov. and Candida manassasensis sp. nov., novel yeasts associated with wood-ingesting insects, and their ecological and biofuel implications. Int J Syst Evol Microbiol 63: 4330-4339.), which includes cellulolytic enzymes. In fungi, cellulose breakdown usually occurs outside the host, as in the case of bark beetles with their fungal associates Ceratocytis spp. and Ophiostoma spp. (both Ascomycota: Pezizomycotina: Sordariomycetes: Ophiostomales) (Harrington 2005HARRINGTON TC. 2005. Ecology and evolution of mycophagous bark beetles and their fungal partners. In: BLACKWELL M & VEGA FE (Eds), Insect–Fungal Associations: Ecology and Evolution. Oxford: Oxford University Press, p. 257-291.), or Xiphydria woodwasps and their Daldinia decipiens and Entonaema cinnabarina (both Ascomycota: Pezizomycotina) fungi (Srutka et al. 2007SRUTKA P, PAZOUTOVA S & KOLARIK M. 2007. Daldinia decipiens and Entonaema cinnabarina as fungal symbionts of Xiphydria wood wasps. Mycol Res 111: 224-231.). This study verified that a significant part (± 50%) of the fungal community sheltered by the three Phylloicus species has cellulolytic behavior. Thus, it is plausible to assume that filamentous fungi associated with aquatic insect DT degrade cellulolytic substrates in the interface of interaction with their hosts, as previously verified for other xylophagous insects that have fungi associated with their DT (Gujjari et al. 2011GUJJARI P, SUH S-O, LEE C-F & ZHOU JJ. 2011. Trichosporon xylopini sp. nov., a hemicellulose-degrading yeast isolated from the wood-inhabiting beetle Xylopinus saperdioides. Int J Syst Evol Microbiol 61: 2538-2542., Suh et al. 2013SUH S-O, HOUSEKNECHT JL, GUJJARI P & ZHOU JJ. 2013. Scheffersomyces parashehatae f.a., sp. nov., Scheffersomyces xylosifermentans f.a., sp. nov., Candida broadrunensis sp. nov. and Candida manassasensis sp. nov., novel yeasts associated with wood-ingesting insects, and their ecological and biofuel implications. Int J Syst Evol Microbiol 63: 4330-4339.).

There are records of cellulolytic strains belonging to some of the genera detected in this study, such as Chaetomium (Al-Kharousi et al. 2015AL-KHAROUSI MM, SIVAKUMAR N & ELSHAFIE A. 2015. Characterization of cellulase enzyme produced by Chaetomium sp. isolated from books and archives. Eurasia J Biosci 9: 52-60., Hu et al. 2018HU Y, LIU Y, HAO X, WANG D, AKHBERDI O, XIANG B & ZHU X. 2018. Regulation of the Gα-cAMP/PKA signaling pathway in cellulose utilization of Chaetomium globosum. Microb Cell Fact 17: 1-13.), Cladosporium (Andersen et al. 2016ANDERSEN B, POULSEN R & HANSEN GH. 2016. Cellulolytic and xylanolytic activities of common indoor fungi. Int Biodeterior Biodegradation 107: 111-116.) and Penicillium (Al-Kharousi et al. 2015AL-KHAROUSI MM, SIVAKUMAR N & ELSHAFIE A. 2015. Characterization of cellulase enzyme produced by Chaetomium sp. isolated from books and archives. Eurasia J Biosci 9: 52-60., Bomtempo et al. 2017BOMTEMPO FVS, SANTIN FMM, PIMENTA RS, OLIVEIRA DP & GUARDA EA. 2017. Production of cellulases by Penicillium oxalicum through solid-state fermentation using agroindustrial substrates. Acta Sci Biol Sci 39: 321-329., Li et al. 2020LI JX, ZHANG F, JIANG DD, LI J, WANG FL, ZHANG Z, WANG W & ZHAO XQ. 2020. Diversity of cellulase-producing filamentous fungi from Tibet and transcriptomic analysis of a superior cellulase producer Trichoderma harzianum LZ117. Front Microbiol 11: 1-15.). However, only the species Penicillium citrinum (Dutta et al. 2008DUTTA T, SAHOO R, SENGUPTA R, RAY SS, BHATTACHARJEE A & GHOSH S. 2008. Novel cellulases from an extremophilic filamentous fungi Penicillium citrinum: production and characterization. J Ind Microbiol Biotechnol 35: 275-282., Ng et al. 2010NG IS, LI CW, CHAN SP, CHIR JL, CHEN PT, TONG CG, YU SM & HO THD. 2010. High-level production of a thermoacidophilic β-glucosidase from Penicillium citrinum YS40-5 by solid-state fermentation with rice bran. Bioresour Technol 101: 1310-1317.) was previously described as cellulolytic.

Although there was a difference in frequency of occurrence among fungal taxa, this frequency was generally low (less than 25%), which is considered an accidental occurrence in analyzing community statistics (Santos et al. 2019SANTOS TT, OLIVEIRA DP, CABETTE HSR & MORAIS PB. 2019. The digestive tract of Phylloicus (Trichoptera: Calamoceratidae) harbours different yeast taxa in Cerrado streams, Brazil. Symbiosis 77: 147-160.); therefore, it is not indicative of symbiotic interaction. In addition, since the amount of exclusive fungal taxa was much higher than that of shared taxa among hosts, there is no indication of a core microbiome (common and shared microbiome) among all of them. Therefore, the fungal community associated with Phylloicus spp. larvae consist mainly of fungal taxa from food items, which come from riparian vegetation (whose plant species are variable) or through water, which is the habitat of these larvae.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

This research was supported by grant 407676/2013-9 from Conselho Nacional de Desenvolvimento Científico e Tecnológico (CNPq) Edital Chamada MCTI/CNPq/FNDCT Ação Transversal - Redes Regionais de Pesquisa em Ecossistemas, Biodiversidade e Biotecnologia N º 79/2013.

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Publication Dates

  • Publication in this collection
    26 Nov 2021
  • Date of issue
    2021

History

  • Received
    18 Apr 2021
  • Accepted
    9 July 2021
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