More diverse rhizobial communities can lead to higher symbiotic nitrogen fixation rates, even in nitrogen-rich soils

Author:

Taylor Benton N.123ORCID,Komatsu Kimberly J.34ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Organismic and Evolutionary Biology Department, Harvard University, 26 Oxford Street, Cambridge, MA 02138, USA

2. The Arnold Arboretum of Harvard University, 1300 Centre Street Roslindale, Boston, MA 02131, USA

3. Smithsonian Environmental Research Center, 647 Contees Wharf Road, Edgewater, MD 21037, USA

4. Department of Biology, University of North Carolina at Greensboro, 321 McIver Street, Greensboro, NC 27402, USA

Abstract

Symbiotic nitrogen (N) fixation (SNF) by legumes and their rhizobial partners is one of the most important sources of bioavailable N to terrestrial ecosystems. While most work on the regulation of SNF has focussed on abiotic drivers such as light, water and soil nutrients, the diversity of rhizobia with which individual legume partners may play an important but under-recognized role in regulating N inputs from SNF. By experimentally manipulating the diversity of rhizobia available to legumes, we demonstrate that rhizobial diversity can increase average SNF rates by more than 90%, and that high rhizobial diversity can induce increased SNF even under conditions of high soil N fertilization. However, the effects of rhizobial diversity, the conditions under which diversity effects were the strongest, and the likely mechanisms driving these diversity effects differed between the two legume species we assessed. These results provide evidence that biodiversity–ecosystem function relationships can occur at the scales of an individual plant and that the effects of rhizobial diversity may be as important as long-established abiotic factors, such as N availability, in driving terrestrial N inputs via SNF.

Funder

Maryland Native Plant Society

Publisher

The Royal Society

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