Fungi rather than bacteria drive early mass loss from fungal necromass regardless of particle size

Author:

Pérez‐Pazos Eduardo12ORCID,Beidler Katilyn V.2,Narayanan Achala2,Beatty Briana H.2,Maillard François3,Bancos Alexandra2,Heckman Katherine A.4,Kennedy Peter G.2

Affiliation:

1. Ecology, Evolution, and Behavior Graduate Program University of Minnesota St. Paul Minnesota USA

2. Department of Plant and Microbial Biology University of Minnesota St. Paul Minnesota USA

3. Microbial Ecology Group, Department of Biology Lund University Lund Sweden

4. USDA Forest Service Northern Research Station Houghton Michigan USA

Abstract

AbstractMicrobial necromass is increasingly recognized as an important fast‐cycling component of the long‐term carbon present in soils. To better understand how fungi and bacteria individually contribute to the decomposition of fungal necromass, three particle sizes (>500, 250–500, and <250 μm) of Hyaloscypha bicolor necromass were incubated in laboratory microcosms inoculated with individual strains of two fungi and two bacteria. Decomposition was assessed after 15 and 28 days via necromass loss, microbial respiration, and changes in necromass pH, water content, and chemistry. To examine how fungal–bacterial interactions impact microbial growth on necromass, single and paired cultures of bacteria and fungi were grown in microplates containing necromass‐infused media. Microbial growth was measured after 5 days through quantitative PCR. Regardless of particle size, necromass colonized by fungi had higher mass loss and respiration than both bacteria and uninoculated controls. Fungal colonization increased necromass pH, water content, and altered chemistry, while necromass colonized by bacteria remained mostly unaltered. Bacteria grew significantly more when co‐cultured with a fungus, while fungal growth was not significantly affected by bacteria. Collectively, our results suggest that fungi act as key early decomposers of fungal necromass and that bacteria may require the presence of fungi to actively participate in necromass decomposition.

Funder

National Science Foundation

Publisher

Wiley

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