As Arctic soils warm, thawed permafrost releases nitrogen (N) that could stimulate plant productivity and thus offset soil carbon losses from tundra ecosystems. Although mycorrhizal fungi could facilitate plant access to permafrost‐derived N, their exploration capacity beyond host plant root systems into deep, cold active layer soils adjacent to the permafrost table is unknown. We characterized root‐associated fungi (RAF) that colonized ericoid (ERM) and ectomycorrhizal (ECM) shrub roots and occurred below the maximum rooting depth in permafrost thaw‐front soil in tussock and shrub tundra communities. We explored the relationships between root and thaw front fungal composition and plant uptake of a15N tracer applied at the permafrost boundary. We show that ERM and ECM shrubs associate with RAF at the thaw front providing evidence for potential mycelial connectivity between roots and the permafrost boundary. Among shrubs and tundra communities, RAF connectivity to the thaw boundary was ubiquitous. The occurrence of particular RAF in both roots and thaw front soil was positively correlated with15N recovered in shrub biomass Taxon‐specific RAF associations could be a mechanism for the vertical redistribution of deep, permafrost‐derived nutrients, which may alleviate N limitation and stimulate productivity in warming tundra.
- Award ID(s):
- 1936752
- NSF-PAR ID:
- 10252154
- Date Published:
- Journal Name:
- Frontiers in Plant Science
- Volume:
- 11
- ISSN:
- 1664-462X
- Format(s):
- Medium: X
- Sponsoring Org:
- National Science Foundation
More Like this
-
Summary -
Abstract Rapid Arctic climate change is leading to woody plant‐dominated ecosystems with potential consequences for caribou foraging and nutritional ecology. While warming has been clearly linked to shrub expansion, the influence of higher temperatures on variables linked to the leaf‐level quality of caribou forage is equivocal. Moreover, warming results in a complex set of ecosystem changes that operate on different timescales such as not only rapidly accelerating phenology, but also slowly increasing thaw depth and plant access to soil resources. Here, we compare changes in leaf nitrogen (N) concentration, digestibility, and protein‐precipitating capacity (PPC) in short‐term (i.e., <1–2 summers) and long‐term (approximately 25 years) experimental warming plots with ambient temperature plots for three species commonly included in caribou summer diets:
Salix pulchra (diamond‐leaf willow),Betula nana (dwarf birch), andEriophorum vaginatum (cottongrass). Short‐term warming modestly decreased leaf N concentration inB. nana. Long‐term and short‐term warming slightly increased the digestibility ofS. pulchra , but only short‐term warming increased digestibility inB. nana . Greater dry matter digestibility in both shrubs occurred through reductions in the lignin and cutin quantity in plant cells. Long‐term warming had no impact on PPC and equivocal impact on digestible protein ofB. nana . Overall, we found short‐term warming to be more impactful on forage quality than long‐term warming at Toolik Lake, Alaska. Apart from a long‐term warming reduction of approximately 13% in acid detergent lignin inS. pulchra andB. nana , other differences were only observed in the short‐term warming plots. Hence, our results indicate acclimation of plants to long‐term warming or possible negative feedback in the system to reduce warming effects. We suggest that warming summers may have a lesser effect on caribou forage than changes in winter precipitation or the influence of climate change on the abundance of critical species in the caribou diet. -
- Root-associated fungi (RAF) and root traits regulate plant acquisition of nitrogen (N), which is limiting to growth in Arctic ecosystems. With anthropogenic warming, a new N source from thawing permafrost has the potential to change vegetation composition and increase productivity, influencing climate feedbacks. Yet, the impact of warming on tundra plant root traits, RAF, and access to permafrost N is uncertain. - We investigated the relationships between RAF, species-specific root traits, and uptake of N from the permafrost boundary by tundra plants experimentally warmed for nearly three decades at Toolik Lake, Alaska. - Warming increased acquisitive root traits of nonmycorrhizal and mycorrhizal plants. RAF community composition of ericoid (ERM) but not ectomycorrhizal (ECM) shrubs was impacted by warming and correlated with root traits. RAF taxa in the dark septate endophyte, ERM, and ECM guilds strongly correlated with permafrost N uptake for ECM and ERM shrubs. Overall, a greater proportion of variation in permafrost N uptake was related to root traits than RAF. - Our findings suggest that warming Arctic ecosystems will result in interactions between roots, RAF, and newly thawed permafrost that may strongly impact feedbacks to the climate system through mechanisms of carbon and N cycling.more » « less
-
Abstract. Arctic warming and permafrost degradation are modifying northernecosystems through changes in microtopography, soil water dynamics, nutrientavailability, and vegetation succession. Upon permafrost degradation, therelease of deep stores of nutrients, such as nitrogen and phosphorus, fromnewly thawed permafrost stimulates Arctic vegetation production. Morespecifically, wetter lowlands show an increase in sedges (as part ofgraminoids), whereas drier uplands favor shrub expansion. These shifts inthe composition of vegetation may influence local mineral element cyclingthrough litter production. In this study, we evaluate the influence ofpermafrost degradation on mineral element foliar stocks and potential annualfluxes upon litterfall. We measured the foliar elemental composition (Al,Ca, Fe, K, Mn, P, S, Si, and Zn) of ∼ 500 samples of typicaltundra plant species from two contrasting Alaskan tundra sites, i.e., anexperimental sedge-dominated site (Carbon in Permafrost Experimental Heating Research, CiPEHR) and natural shrub-dominated site(Gradient). The foliar concentration of these mineral elements was species specific, with sedge leaves having relatively high Si concentration andshrub leaves having relatively high Ca and Mn concentrations. Therefore,changes in the species biomass composition of the Arctic tundra in responseto permafrost thaw are expected to be the main factors that dictate changesin elemental composition of foliar stocks and maximum potential foliarfluxes upon litterfall. We observed an increase in the mineral elementfoliar stocks and potential annual litterfall fluxes, with Si increasingwith sedge expansion in wetter sites (CiPEHR), and Ca and Mn increasing withshrub expansion in drier sites (Gradient). Consequently, we expect thatsedge and shrub expansion upon permafrost thaw will lead to changes inlitter elemental composition and therefore affect nutrient cycling acrossthe sub-Arctic tundra with potential implications for further vegetationsuccession.more » « less
-
Abstract Arctic regions are experiencing the greatest rates of climate warming on the planet and marked changes have already been observed in terrestrial arctic ecosystems. While most studies have focused on the effects of warming on arctic vegetation and nutrient cycling, little is known about how belowground communities, such as fungi root‐associated, respond to warming. Here, we investigate how long‐term summer warming affects ectomycorrhizal (ECM) fungal communities. We used Ion Torrent sequencing of the
rDNA internal transcribed spacer 2 (ITS2) region to compare ECM fungal communities in plots with and without long‐term experimental warming in both dry and moist tussock tundra.Cortinarius was the most OTU‐rich genus in the moist tundra, while the most diverse genus in the dry tundra wasTomentella . On the diversity level, in the moist tundra we found significant differences in community composition, and a sharp decrease in the richness of ECM fungi due to warming. On the functional level, our results indicate that warming induces shifts in the extramatrical properties of the communities, where the species with medium‐distance exploration type seem to be favored with potential implications for the mobilization of different nutrient pools in the soil. In the dry tundra, neither community richness nor community composition was significantly altered by warming, similar to what had been observed in ECM host plants. There was, however, a marginally significant increase in OTUs identified as ECM fungi with the medium‐distance exploration type in the warmed plots. Linking our findings of decreasing richness with previous results of increasing ECM fungal biomass suggests that certain ECM species are favored by warming and may become more abundant, while many other species may go locally extinct due to direct or indirect effects of warming. Such compositional shifts in the community might affect nutrient cycling and soil organic C storage.