scholarly journals Contrasting effects of nitrogen availability on plant carbon supply to mycorrhizal fungi and saprotrophs - a hypothesis based on field observations in boreal forest

2003 ◽  
Vol 160 (1) ◽  
pp. 225-238 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mona N. Högberg ◽  
Erland Bååth ◽  
Anders Nordgren ◽  
Kristina Arnebrant ◽  
Peter Högberg
Author(s):  
Nils Henriksson ◽  
Oskar Franklin ◽  
Lasse Tarvainen ◽  
John Marshall ◽  
Judith Lundberg-Felten ◽  
...  

The mycorrhizal symbiosis is ubiquitous in boreal forests. Trees and plants provide their fungal partners with photosynthetic carbon in exchange for soil nutrients like nitrogen, which is critical to the growth and survival of the plants. But plant carbon allocation to mycorrhizal symbionts can also fuel nitrogen immobilization, hampering tree growth. Here we present results from field and greenhouse experiments combined with mathematical modelling, showing that mycorrhizal fungi can be simultaneously mutualistic to an individual tree and parasitic to the networked community of trees. Mycorrhizal networks connect multiple plants and fungi, and we show that each tree gains additional nitrogen at the expense of its neighbors by supplying more carbon to the fungi. But this additional carbon supply eventually aggravates nitrogen immobilization in the shared fungal biomass. Individual trees may thus independently benefit from increasing their carbon investment to mycorrhiza, while causing a decline in nitrogen availability for the whole plant community. We illustrate the evolutionary underpinnings of this situation by drawing on the analogous the tragedy of the commons, and explain how rising atmospheric CO2 may lead to greater nitrogen immobilization in the future.


2020 ◽  
Vol 20 (10) ◽  
pp. 3607-3614
Author(s):  
Amal Succarie ◽  
Zhihong Xu ◽  
Wenjie Wang ◽  
Tengjiao Liu ◽  
Xiting Zhang ◽  
...  

1984 ◽  
Vol 14 (4) ◽  
pp. 554-558 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. E. Krasny ◽  
K. A. Vogt ◽  
J. C. Zasada

Root and shoot biomass and mycorrhizal development were examined for white spruce (Piceaglauca (Moench) Voss) seedlings naturally regenerating in four floodplain communities in the boreal forest. Mean seedling biomass was highest in the open community and lowest in the spruce community. Seedlings growing in the open community had higher root:shoot ratios (0.50) compared with seedlings growing in the willow (0.34), alder (0.20), and spruce (0.24) communities. Essentially all short roots of spruce seedlings growing in all four communities were infected by mycorrhizal fungi throughout the growing season.


2012 ◽  
Vol 55 ◽  
pp. 7-13 ◽  
Author(s):  
Matthew D. Whiteside ◽  
Michelle A. Digman ◽  
Enrico Gratton ◽  
Kathleen K. Treseder

2004 ◽  
Vol 82 (8) ◽  
pp. 1243-1263 ◽  
Author(s):  
David J Read ◽  
Jonathan R Leake ◽  
Jesus Perez-Moreno

The importance of mycorrhizas in heathland and boreal forest biomes, which together cover much of the landmass of the Northern Hemisphere and store most of the global stocks of carbon, is reviewed. The taxonomic affinities of the organisms forming these symbiotic partnerships are assessed, and the distinctive structural features of the ericoid mycorrhizas of heathland dwarf shrubs and the ectomycorrhizas of boreal forest trees are described. It is stressed that neither in terms of the geographical distribution of the plants nor in terms of the occurrence of their characteristic mycorrhizas in the soil profile should these biomes be considered to be mutually exclusive. What unites them is their apparent affinity for acidic organic soils of inherently low accessibility of the major nutrients nitrogen (N) and phosphorus (P). These properties relate directly to the nature of the nutrient-poor recalcitrant litter produced by their host plants and through positive-feedback mechanisms that are reinforced by selective removal of labile nutrients by the mycorrhizas. We suggest that coevolution of these plant litter traits with mycorrhizal associations that are adapted to them has been one of the defining features of these ecosystems. Ericoid and ectomycorrhizal fungi have biochemical and physiological attributes that make them highly efficient at scavenging for organic sources of N and P in surface soil horizons. In so doing, they restrict supplies of these elements to the decomposer communities. Case studies involving exploitation of N and P in defined organic substrates are described. In both biomes the dominant plants depend upon the abilities of their fungal partners to recover nutrients, so the symbioses control nutrient cycles, productivity, species composition, and functioning of these ecosystems. It is in this context that the fungal symbionts are here considered to be drivers of nutritional processes in their respective biomes. Through their influences upon the quality of carbon residues mycorrhizal fungi must also affect the sink-source balance for this key element in soil. There is an urgent need for the evaluation of the relative contributions of symbiotic and saprotrophic components of the microflora to the processes of carbon storage and cycling in these biomes, particularly in the context of global climate change and impacts of anthropogenic pollutant N deposition.Key words: carbon sequestration, peatlands, C/N ratios, carbon and nutrient cycles.


1994 ◽  
Vol 126 (1) ◽  
pp. 137-143 ◽  
Author(s):  
TORGNY NÄSHOLM ANN-BRITTEDFAST ◽  
ANDERS ERICSSON ◽  
LARS-GÖSTA NORDÉN

Author(s):  
Sergio Rossi ◽  
Shaokang Zhang ◽  
Annie Deslauries ◽  
Valentina Butto ◽  
Hubert Morin ◽  
...  

Ecology ◽  
2015 ◽  
Author(s):  
Niles Jacob Hasselquist ◽  
Daniel B. Metcalfe ◽  
Erich Inselsbacher ◽  
Zsofia Stangl ◽  
Ram Oren ◽  
...  

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