Shifts in mycorrhizal types of fungi and plants in response to fertilisation, warming and herbivory in a tundra grassland

Author:

Le Noir de Carlan Coline1ORCID,Kaarlejärvi Elina2ORCID,De Tender Caroline34ORCID,Heinecke Thilo1ORCID,Eskelinen Anu567ORCID,Verbruggen Erik1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Plants and Ecosystems (PLECO), Department of Biology University of Antwerp Universiteitsplein 1 2610 Wilrijk Belgium

2. Research Centre for Ecological Change, Organismal and Evolutionary Biology University of Helsinki PO Box 65 (Viikinkaari 1) Helsinki FI‐00014 Finland

3. Plant Sciences Unit Flanders Research Institute for Agriculture, Fisheries and Food (ILVO) Burg. Van Gansberghelaan 96‐109 9820 Merelbeke Belgium

4. Department of Biochemistry and Microbiology Ghent University K.L. Ledeganckstraat 35 9000 Ghent Belgium

5. Ecology & Genetics University of Oulu PO Box 8000 FI‐90014 Oulu Finland

6. Department of Physiological Diversity Helmholtz Center for Environmental Research – UFZ Permoserstrasse 15 04318 Leipzig Germany

7. German Centre for Integrative Biodiversity Research (iDiv) Puschstraße 4 04103 Leipzig Germany

Abstract

Summary Climate warming is severely affecting high‐latitude regions. In the Arctic tundra, it may lead to enhanced soil nutrient availability and interact with simultaneous changes in grazing pressure. It is presently unknown how these concurrently occurring global change drivers affect the root‐associated fungal communities, particularly mycorrhizal fungi, and whether changes coincide with shifts in plant mycorrhizal types. We investigated changes in root‐associated fungal communities and mycorrhizal types of the plant community in a 10‐yr factorial experiment with warming, fertilisation and grazing exclusion in a Finnish tundra grassland. The strongest determinant of the root‐associated fungal community was fertilisation, which consistently increased potential plant pathogen abundance and had contrasting effects on the different mycorrhizal fungal types, contingent on other treatments. Plant mycorrhizal types went through pronounced shifts, with warming favouring ecto‐ and ericoid mycorrhiza but not under fertilisation and grazing exclusion. Combination of all treatments resulted in dominance by arbuscular mycorrhizal plants. However, shifts in plant mycorrhizal types vs fungi were mostly but not always aligned in their magnitude and direction. Our results show that our ability to predict shifts in symbiotic and antagonistic fungal communities depend on simultaneous consideration of multiple global change factors that jointly alter plant and fungal communities.

Funder

Suomen Kulttuurirahasto

Academy of Finland

FP7 People: Marie-Curie Actions

Publisher

Wiley

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