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The role of forest trees and their mycorrhizal fungi in carbonate rock weathering and its significance for global carbon cycling

Journal

PLANT CELL AND ENVIRONMENT
Volume 38, Issue 9, Pages 1947-1961

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/pce.12444

Keywords

alkalinity; arbuscular mycorrhiza; chemical weathering; climate change; ectomycorrhiza; soil carbonates; soil pH

Categories

Funding

  1. E-Futures Doctoral Training Centre
  2. EPSRC
  3. ERC (CDREG) [32998]
  4. NERC [NE/J007471/1, NE/C004566/1, NE/I024089/1, NE/C521001/1] Funding Source: UKRI
  5. Natural Environment Research Council [NE/J007471/1, NE/C521001/1, NE/I024089/1, NE/C004566/1] Funding Source: researchfish

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On million-year timescales, carbonate rock weathering exerts no net effect on atmospheric CO2 concentration. However, on timescales of decades-to-centuries, it can contribute to sequestration of anthropogenic CO2 and increase land-ocean alkalinity flux, counteracting ocean acidification. Historical evidence indicates this flux is sensitive to land use change, and recent experimental evidence suggests that trees and their associated soil microbial communities are major drivers of continental mineral weathering. Here, we review key physical and chemical mechanisms by which the symbiotic mycorrhizal fungi of forest tree roots potentially enhance carbonate rock weathering. Evidence from our ongoing field study at the UK's national pinetum confirms increased weathering of carbonate rocks by a wide range of gymnosperm and angiosperm tree species that form arbuscular (AM) or ectomycorrhizal (EM) fungal partnerships. We demonstrate that calcite-containing rock grains under EM tree species weather significantly faster than those under AM trees, an effect linked to greater soil acidification by EM trees. Weathering and corresponding alkalinity export are likely to increase with rising atmospheric CO2 and associated climate change. Our analyses suggest that strategic planting of fast-growing EM angiosperm taxa on calcite- and dolomite-rich terrain might accelerate the transient sink for atmospheric CO2 and slow rates of ocean acidification. Carbonate mineral weathering in forest soils could act as a transient sink for anthropogenic CO (2) over human timescales of decades to centuries. Our manuscript reviews key physical and chemical mechanisms of carbonate weathering by mycorrhizal fungi of forest tree roots. We also present results of an ongoing field study at the UK's National Pinetum that demonstrates enhanced carbonate weathering by a range of tree species, particularly by ectomycorrhizal species.

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