# Connectivity and Age of Restored Atlantic Forest Fragments Drives Composition and Functionality of the Fungal Community in the Leaf Litter Layer

**Authors:** Guilherme Lucio Martins, Dina in 't Zandt, Luis Fernando Merloti, Wanderlei Bieluczyk, Gabriel Silvestre Rocha, Robert Timmers, Ricardo Ribeiro Rodrigues, Siu Mui Tsai, Wim H. van der Putten

PMC · DOI: 10.1111/mec.70325 · 2026-03-24

## TL;DR

Restoring connected forest areas helps recover important fungi in leaf litter, which supports forest health and biodiversity.

## Contribution

This study shows that forest connectivity has a stronger impact than forest age on restoring fungal communities in leaf litter.

## Key findings

- Fungal composition in forest litter is more diverse and less uniform compared to pasture litter.
- Forest connectivity promotes wood saprotrophs and endophytes while suppressing soil saprotrophs.
- Tree diversity and leaf litter chemistry strongly influence fungal guilds like endophytes and saprophytes.

## Abstract

The restoration of biodiversity and functional tropical forests is critical to mitigating global biodiversity losses. Aboveground, increasing the connectivity of regenerating forest fragments facilitates the recolonization of tropical forest biodiversity. However, restoring functional ecosystems also requires the recovery of decomposition processes as these are essential in shaping aboveground biodiversity. Therefore, we investigate the role of forest connectivity in restoring the composition and functioning of fungal communities in the leaf litter layer during a chronosequence of forest restoration. In the Brazilian Atlantic Forest, we studied secondary forests regrown between 18 and 55 years after deforestation and different levels of forest connectivity and compared their litter to recently abandoned pastures and undisturbed primary forests. We quantified how forest age and connectivity between fragments influenced the litter fungi composition in relation to tree diversity, litter chemistry and litter isotopes. We show that fungal composition was highly heterogeneous in forest litter, whereas pasture litter exhibited a more homogeneous community. Moreover, forest connectivity had stronger effects on litter fungal composition compared to forest age. Connectivity promoted wood saprotrophs and endophytes, while suppressing soil saprotrophs, with its effects being more evident during later stages of restoration. Fungal guilds such as endophytes and saprophytes were primarily influenced by tree diversity and leaf litter chemistry. We conclude that forest connectivity promotes the re‐establishment of saprophytic fungi capable of decomposing recalcitrant litter substrates, driven mainly by enhancing tree diversity and litter quality. Practical implications of increasing connectivity may relate to forest resilience in front of future climate change scenarios.

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** Fungal (MESH:D009181)
- **Chemicals:** tannin (MESH:D013634), Fe (MESH:D007501), Zn (MESH:D015032), K (MESH:D011188), B (MESH:D001895), lignin (MESH:D008031), Ca (MESH:D002118), Mn (MESH:D008345), HNO3 (MESH:D017942), agarose (MESH:D012685), 12C (-), C (MESH:D002244), 13C (MESH:C000615229), cellulose (MESH:D002482), S (MESH:D013455), HClO4 (MESH:C576518), P (MESH:D010758), N (MESH:D009584), Cu (MESH:D003300), Mg (MESH:D008274), phosphate (MESH:D010710)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606], Sordariomycetes (class) [taxon 147550], Bos taurus (bovine, species) [taxon 9913], Eucalyptus (genus) [taxon 3932]

## Figures

5 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC13010786/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC13010786