Experimental evidence that root‐associated fungi improve plant growth at high altitude

Author:

Burg Skylar1ORCID,Ovaskainen Otso12ORCID,Furneaux Brendan1ORCID,Ivanova Natalia34ORCID,Abrahamyan Arusyak35ORCID,Niittynen Pekka1ORCID,Somervuo Panu2ORCID,Abrego Nerea16ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Biological and Environmental Science University of Jyväskylä Jyväskylä Finland

2. Organismal and Evolutionary Biology Research Programme, Faculty of Biological and Environmental Sciences University of Helsinki Helsinki Finland

3. Canadian Centre for DNA Barcoding, Centre for Biodiversity Genomics University of Guelph Guelph Ontario Canada

4. Nature Metrics North America Ltd. Guelph Ontario Canada

5. ImmunoCeutica Inc. Guelph Ontario Canada

6. Department of Agricultural Sciences University of Helsinki Helsinki Finland

Abstract

AbstractUnravelling how species communities change along environmental gradients requires a dual understanding: the direct responses of the species to their abiotic surroundings and the indirect variation of these responses through biotic interactions. Here, we focus on the interactive relationships between plants and their symbiotic root‐associated fungi (RAF) along stressful abiotic gradients. We investigate whether variations in RAF community composition along altitudinal gradients influence plant growth at high altitudes, where both plants and fungi face harsher abiotic conditions. We established a translocation experiment between pairs of Bistorta vivipara populations across altitudinal gradients. To separate the impact of shifting fungal communities from the overall influence of changing abiotic conditions, we used a root barrier to prevent new colonization by RAF following translocation. To characterize the RAF communities, we applied DNA barcoding to the root samples. Through the utilization of joint species distribution modelling, we assessed the relationship between changes in plant functional traits resulting from experimental treatments and the corresponding changes in the RAF communities. Our findings indicate that RAF communities influence plant responses to stressful abiotic conditions. Plants translocated from low to high altitudes grew more when they were able to associate with the resident high‐altitude RAF compared to those plants that were not allowed to associate with the resident RAF. We conclude that interactions with RAF impact how plants respond to stressful abiotic conditions. Our results provide experimental support that interactions with RAF improve plant stress tolerance to altitudinal stressors such as colder temperatures and less nutrient availability.

Funder

H2020 European Research Council

Publisher

Wiley

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