ABSTRACT Specific interactions between bacteria and ectomycorrhizal fungi (EcMF) can benefit plant health, and saprotrophic soil fungi represent a potentially antagonistic guild to these mutualisms. Yet there is little field‐derived experimental evidence showing how the relationship among these three organismal groups manifests across time. To bridge this knowledge gap, we experimentally reduced EcMF in forest soils and monitored both bacterial and fungal soil communities over the course of a year. Our analyses demonstrate that soil trenching shifts the community composition of fungal communities towards a greater abundance of taxa with saprotrophic traits, and this shift is linked to a decrease in both EcMF and a common ectomycorrhizal helper bacterial genus,Burkholderia, in a time‐dependent manner. These results not only reveal the temporal nature of a widespread tripartite symbiosis between bacteria, EcMF and a shared host tree, but they also refine our understanding of the commonly referenced ‘Gadgil effect’ by illustrating the cascading effects of EcMF suppression and implicating soil saprotrophic fungi as potential antagonists on bacterial‐EcMF interactions.
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Shifting Fungal Guild Abundances are Associated with Altered Temperate Forest Soil Carbon Stocks
Despite the importance of fungi to forest carbon (C) cycling and increasing calls to include microbial interactions in ecosystem models, how shifting fungal guild abundances impact soil C stocks re- mains poorly quantified, particularly in mineral soils where most C is stored. Additionally, a greater understanding of how fungal interguild interac- tions affect belowground litter decomposition is needed to more fully characterize soil C dynamics. To address these knowledge gaps, we conducted a multi-year soil trenching experiment in two tem- perate Pinus strobus stands in Minnesota, USA. We found that after two years, trenching increased ectomycorrhizal fungal relative abundance while decreasing saprotrophic fungal relative abundance (decreased ectomycorrhizal/saprotrophic ratio) and concurrently decreased soil C stocks by 10%. The decreased C stocks were primarily due to changes in particulate organic matter and were largely constrained to the top 5 cm of the soil. Trenching also stimulated both root and fungal litter decom- position in surface soils. Together, these results support the often proposed but rarely tested hypothesis that shifting fungal guild abundances promote soil C accumulation. However, they also suggest this effect may be most relevant for short- term C storage in upper soil layers.
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- Award ID(s):
- 2019518
- PAR ID:
- 10655291
- Publisher / Repository:
- Ecosystems
- Date Published:
- Journal Name:
- Ecosystems
- ISSN:
- 1435-0629
- Format(s):
- Medium: X
- Sponsoring Org:
- National Science Foundation
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