4.5 Article

Arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi promote small-scale vegetation recovery in the forest understorey

Journal

OECOLOGIA
Volume 197, Issue 3, Pages 685-697

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00442-021-05065-9

Keywords

AM fungi; Plant community; Disturbance; Species richness; Community composition

Categories

Funding

  1. University of Tartu [PLTOM20903]
  2. Estonian Research Council [MOBTP105, PRG1065]
  3. European Regional Development Fund (Centre of Excellence EcolChange)

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The study found that small-scale variation in nutrient availability has significant impacts on plant and AM fungal communities, but has limited influence on interactions in stable ecosystems. Suppression of fungal activity reduced richness, abundance, and phylogenetic diversity of AM fungal communities, leading to decreased plant species richness and diversity.
Root-associating arbuscular mycorrhizal (AM) fungi foster vegetation recovery in degraded habitats. AM fungi increase nutrient availability for host plants; therefore, their importance is expected to be higher when nutrient availability is low. However, little is known about how small-scale variation in nutrient availability influences plant and AM fungal communities in a stable ecosystem. We conducted a 2-year field study in the understorey of a boreonemoral forest where we examined plant and AM fungal communities at microsites (15 cm diameter) with intact vegetation cover and at disturbed microsites where vegetation was cleared away and soil was sterilized to remove soil biota. We manipulated soil nutrient content (increased with fertilizer, unchanged, or decreased with sucrose addition) and fungal activity (natural or suppressed by fungicide addition) at these microsites. After two vegetation seasons, manipulations with nutrient content resulted in significant, although moderate, differences in the content of soil nutrients (e.g. in soil phosphorus). Suppression of fungal activity resulted in lower richness, abundance and phylogenetic diversity of AM fungal community, independently of microsite type and soil fertility level. Plant species richness and diversity decreased when fungal activity was suppressed at disturbed but not in intact microsites. The correlation between plant and AM fungal communities was not influenced by microsite type or soil fertility. We conclude that small-scale variation in soil fertility and habitat integrity does not influence the interactions between plants and AM fungi. The richness, but not composition, of AM fungal communities recovered fast after small-scale disturbance and supported the recovery of species-rich vegetation.

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