Ectomycorrhizal Fungal Community Response to Disturbance and Host Phenology

Ectomycorrhizal Fungal Community Response to Disturbance and Host Phenology
Author: Stefan F. Hupperts
Publisher:
Total Pages: 114
Release: 2016
Genre: Ectomycorrhizal fungi
ISBN:

The relationship between trees and ectomycorrhizal fungi is fundamental for tree growth and survival, particularly in the boreal forests of North America where low temperatures inhibit decomposition and consequently limit nutrient availability. The responses of ectomycorrhizal fungal communities to large-scale disturbances and host phenology are not well known, but are important for restoring and predicting carbon and nutrient cycling. To that end, I investigated the ectomycorrhizal fungal community present on roots of outplanted seedlings in sites that captured a gradient of above and belowground disturbances. Additionally, I monitored the extracellular enzyme secretions of ectomycorrhizal fungi during four phenological stages (host dormancy, leaf flush, full leaf expansion, leaf abscission) of mature Populus tremuloides stands to assess the potential decomposing activity of ectomycorrhizal fungi in relation to changes in tree physiology. Contrary to my prediction, there was no difference in ectomycorrhizal fungal community composition across sites that differed in extent of above and belowground disturbances; composition was instead primarily affected by the species of seedling used to assay the soils. Further, I found relatively constant levels of enzyme secretions by ectomycorrhizas across phenological stages irrespective of the amount of carbon stored in roots, suggesting the enzymes I measured may be secreted to acquire nitrogen or phosphorus locked within organic matter. Additionally, potential enzyme activity was better predicted by the foraging strategy of ectomycorrhizal fungi, highlighting the functional roles of species. These findings emphasize the importance of planting a diverse community of trees in reclaimed soils to yield a diverse community of belowground fungi. Moreover, differences in potential enzyme activity of exploration types throughout phenological stages point to unique functional roles among fungi, which may change seasonally. Consequently, this research stresses the importance of restoring functional diversity in reconstructed ecosystems.

Comparing Arbuscular and Ectomycorrhizal Fungal Communities in Seven North American Forests and Their Response to Nitrogen Fertilization

Comparing Arbuscular and Ectomycorrhizal Fungal Communities in Seven North American Forests and Their Response to Nitrogen Fertilization
Author: Jennifer Lyn Lansing
Publisher:
Total Pages: 332
Release: 2003
Genre: Ectomycorrhizal fungi
ISBN:

Mycorrhizal fungi are found extensively in forest soils and play a crucial role in carbon and nitrogen cycling between plant and soil. However, little is known about how mycorrhizal communities differ between forest systems or what role they play in below ground carbon dynamics. This study addresses the basic ecological questions of how ECM and AM vary between gymnosperm and angiosperm host taxa in undisturbed forest ecosystems which vary in climate and soil characteristics. I use a manipulative N fertilization experiment to study the mycorrhizae between forest sites and their role in ecosystem cycling. AM and ECM percent colonized root length and colonized root length per minirhizotron frame differed between sites and between years. The extramatrical hyphae of all four major AM genera were present at all sites whereas spores, in low abundance, were mainly Glomus spp. Richness of ECM morphotypes was similar between sites at a variety of scales. Functional groups based on ECM morphological characters differed between sites and some fertilization effects were found. Site location was the most influential factor in determining mycorrhizal abundance, composition, and overall role in carbon and nitrogen cycling. At the P. edulis site, I intensively studied the abundance, diversity, composition, and spatial distribution of ECM using morphotyping and RFLP analysis. Years differed in ECM abundance and composition. ECM types differed in frequency across the landscape, abundance at any individual tree, and spatial aggregation. Each P. edulis tree was similar in ECM tip abundance, richness, and number of dominant ECM types. At all scales a few ECM types were dominant however there was temporal and tree to tree variability in which ECM were dominant. The individual tree is the most important sampling unit when assessing P. edulis ECM diversity and composition. Also at the P. edulis site, using RFLP analysis to identify ECM types and 14C to estimate age I found a differential response in the 14C signature of RFLP types to N fertilization indicating that N fertilization does not affect all ECM fungi similarly and functional differences in ECM fungi exist.

The Fungal Connection

The Fungal Connection
Author: Ashley Craig
Publisher:
Total Pages: 88
Release: 2010
Genre:
ISBN:

Ectomycorrhizal (ECM) fungi are symbionts on the roots of woody plant species throughout the world. These fungi provide plants with nutrients and are important drivers of ecosystem processes. ECM fungi vary in their effect on host plants and host-specificity, making them important considerations in restoration projects seeking to restore target tree species. Restoration strategies such as burning and thinning may have strong impacts on ECM fungi, and given the that ECM are important in structuring aboveground communities and maintaining certain dominant plant taxa, knowledge of ECM fungal response is needed to ensure restoration efforts succeed. Using molecular methods, this research aimed to identify the ECM fungal community in a restoration project in northern Mississippi, comparing the belowground fungal community on plant roots between replicated control and treatment plots. We also measured abiotic factors that may structure the ECM fungal community, including litter depth, canopy openness, burn regimen, and soil compaction. Results indicate that the ECM fungal community is very diverse with 175 operational taxon units recovered from sequence data, 106 OTUs only found once. The fungal species had high site fidelity, with site being the factor explaining the most variation in community structure. Taxa in the family Russulaceae represented the most abundant fungi found on roots, followed by Thelephoraceae. The abiotic factors measured accounted for only 10% of the variation in community structure, indicating that other unmeasured variables may account for the remaining variation in ECM community distribution. Spatial autocorrelation was found at one of the six plots, indicating similar ECM fungal species composition at scales greater than in the other 5 sites. This plot also had the greatest canopy openness and oak regeneration, suggesting that this greater spatial autocorrelation could be related to oak seedling facilitation. The restoration treatments did not have a strong impact on fungal community structure except in the Tallahatchie plots, where there was a strong difference between treatment and control plots. This study was the first assessment of belowground ECM fungal diversity in Mississippi, and will serve as a starting point for further investigation into shifts in the fungal community as a result of restoration.

Ectomycorrhizal Fungi

Ectomycorrhizal Fungi
Author: John W.G. Cairney
Publisher: Springer Science & Business Media
Total Pages: 377
Release: 2013-03-09
Genre: Science
ISBN: 3662068273

Mycorrhiza - the symbiosis between plants and fungi - plays a key role in plant life. This book reviews for the first time the current knowledge of 15 individual genera of ectomycorrhizal fungi. It is unique in that each chapter is dedicated to a single fungal genus, each written by internationally recognized experts on the respective fungal genera. It is thus an invaluable reference source for researchers, students and practitioners in the fields of mycorrhizal biology, mycology, forestry, plant sciences and soil biology.

Ectomycorrhizae and Forest Biogeochemistry

Ectomycorrhizae and Forest Biogeochemistry
Author: Nicholas Paul Rosenstock
Publisher:
Total Pages: 212
Release: 2010
Genre:
ISBN:

Ectomycorrhizal communities may play a major role in preventing decreases in forest productivity associated with the depletion of nutrients caused by anthropogenic nitrogen and in facilitating increased productivity in response to elevated atmospheric CO2 concentrations. In my doctoral research I attempted to shed some light on the following question: As nutrient demand by forest trees is altered by human induced global change how will the functioning of ectomycorrhizal communities respond? In chapter 1, I present the results of a study of the effects of nitrogen fertilization on ectomycorrhizal communities in an Eastern US hardwood forest. I found the ectomycorrhizal communities of the organic and mineral horizon to be quite distinct, and that high, but not moderate levels of nitrogen fertilization altered the ectomycorrhizal community composition and decreased ectomycorrhizal species richness. I also found that ectomycorrhizal colonization intensity increased in the mineral soil, and when considered in conjunction with other studies conducted in the same research forest, this may indicate that the ectomycorrrhizal community is shifting in accordance with the shifting nutrient demands of the forest. In Chapter 2, I attempted to elucidate the role of soil heterogeneity in shaping fungal community composition in the mineral soil. Depth and soil carbon content were consistently correlated with fungal community composition. The parent material from which the overlying soil is derived and soil calcium content may be important in determining fungal community composition but our sampling scheme did not allow us to isolate these chemical factors from the potential influence of geographic location on fungal community. In chapter 3, I present a literature review that endeavored to determine whether there is potential for ectomycorrhizal communities or individuals to alter their mineral weathering capabilities and nutrient provision to host plants in response to altered nutrient demand from their host plants. Knowledge of the mechanisms that control belowground carbon allocation by plants in response to nutrient demand is limited, but there is a potential for plants to respond to increased demand of phosphorous and potassium by allocating more carbon to the fungal symbionts most adept at providing these nutrients. Future studies on ectomycorrhizal weathering should explicitly test the role of host nutrient demand in stimulating fungal weathering. In chapter 4, I investigated the role of plants, ectomycorrhizae, and low molecular weight organic acids in stimulating mineral weathering, as well as the potential for elevated carbon dioxide to affect biotic weathering. We found that plants, but not their associated ectomycorrhizae, stimulated weathering. Elevated CO2 did not affect weathering rates. The lack of an effect of ectomycorrhizal colonization may have been due to low levels of mycorrhizal colonization. The biotic weathering observed in this study was driven by the uptake of nutrient cations, and not by substrate acidification or root exudation. My doctoral research suggests that ectomycorrhizae may play an important role in mineral nutrient provision.

Ectomycorrhizal Communities and Ecological Restoration

Ectomycorrhizal Communities and Ecological Restoration
Author: Amy Suzanne Karpati
Publisher:
Total Pages: 158
Release: 2010
Genre: Ectomycorrhizal fungi
ISBN:

Ecological restoration plans rarely take into consideration the soil community of microbial mutualists. One particular group of soil microbes, mycorrhizal fungi, is known to confer benefits to associating host plants and can even influence plant community structure. The primary objectives of this dissertation are to: 1) Determine whether ectomycorrhizal fungal (EMF) communities differ among disturbed candidate restoration sites and old-growth woodland reference sites; 2) Test whether common urban soil stressors alter EMF communities; and 3) Test the efficacy of commercial and field mycorrhizal inoculants for use in restoration projects. In each experiment, colonization by EMF of Quercus rubra (northern red oak) seedlings was used along with morphological and molecular sampling methods to measure EMF community characteristics. EMF abundance and species richness was significantly lower in disturbed site soils and community composition was significantly different from that of reference sites. A suite of urban fungal species was identified that occurred across several study sites. Several common urban soil stressors were found to lower EMF abundance or species richness, indicating that edaphic factors could be partially responsible for depauperate EMF communities of disturbed sites. Inoculation of oak seedlings planted at two disturbed sites failed to result in significant EMF colonization of the seedlings' root systems, showing that both commercial and field-collected inoculum might not be effective in restoring EMF communities to degraded sites. This research suggests that the soil EMF community should be addressed in woodland restoration projects and more work is necessary to determine how best to restore EMF communities.