Interactions of arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi, critical loads of nitrogen deposition, and shifts from native to invasive species in a southern California shrubland

Author:

Allen Edith B.1,Egerton-Warburton Louise M.2,Hilbig Bridget E.1,Valliere Justin M.1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Botany and Plant Sciences, University of California, Riverside, Riverside, CA 92521, USA.

2. Chicago Botanic Garden, Plant Science Center, 1000 Lake Cook Road, Glencoe, IL 60022, USA.

Abstract

Anthropogenic nitrogen (N) deposition and invasive species are causing declines in global biodiversity, and both factors impact the diversity and functioning of arbuscular mycorrhizal (AM) fungi. Shifts in arbuscular mycorrhizal fungal (AMF) communities can generate feedback to native plants and affect their success, as was observed in California’s coastal sage scrub, which is a Mediterranean-type shrubland threatened by invasive grasses. As vegetation-type conversion from native shrubland to exotic annual grassland increased along a gradient of increasing N deposition, the richness of native plant species and of spore morphotypes decreased. Rapid declines in all plant and fungal values occurred at the critical load (CL) of 10–11 kg N·ha−1·year−1, indicating that AM fungi respond to the same environmental signals as the plants, and can be used to assess CL. Shrub root colonization also decreased along the N gradient, but colonization of the invasive grass was dominated by a fine AMF endophyte that was unresponsive to elevated N. A greenhouse experiment to assess AMF functioning showed that the native shrub Artemisia californica Less. had a negative growth response to an inoculum from high-N but not low-N soils, whereas the invasive grass Bromus rubens L. had a positive response to both inocula. Differential functioning of AM fungi under N deposition may in part explain vegetation-type conversion and the decline of this native shrubland.

Publisher

Canadian Science Publishing

Subject

Plant Science,Ecology,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

Reference45 articles.

1. Allen, E.B., Rao, L.E., Tonnesen, G., Johnson, R.F., Fenn, M.E., and Bytnerowicz, A. 2014. Using fire risk and species loss to set critical loads for N deposition in southern California shrublands. Chapter 34. In Nitrogen Deposition, Critical Loads and Biodiversity (Proceedings of the International Nitrogen Initiative workshop, Linking Experts of the Convention on Long-range Transboundary Air Pollution and the Convention on Biological Diversity). Edited by M.A. Sutton, K.E. Mason, L.J. Sheppard, H. Sverdrup, R. Haeuber, and W.K. Hicks. Springer Science. pp. 319–327.

2. ECOLOGY OF MYCORRHIZAE: A Conceptual Framework for Complex Interactions Among Plants and Fungi

3. Responses to chronic N fertilization of ectomycorrhizal piñon but not arbuscular mycorrhizal juniper in a piñon-juniper woodland

4. Differences in arbuscular mycorrhizal fungal communities associated with sugar maple seedlings in and outside of invaded garlic mustard forest patches

5. Soil Moisture and Biogeochemical Factors Influence the Distribution of Annual Bromus Species

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