4.5 Article

Nitrogen addition and fungal symbiosis alter early dune plant succession

Journal

OECOLOGIA
Volume 201, Issue 4, Pages 1067-1077

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00442-023-05362-5

Keywords

Ammophila; Epichloe; Fungi; Mutualism; Nitrogen deposition

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Anthropogenic nitrogen (N) enrichment in low-nutrient primary successional systems may affect plant community assembly and the dominance of ecosystem-engineering plants. The study examines the direct and interactive effects of microbial symbiosis and N addition on plant succession in Michigan, USA. The research finds that N addition suppresses plant diversity by reducing species richness when the symbiotic fungal endophyte Epichloe amarillans is present in the dominant dune grass species Ammophila breviligulata. N addition also alters plant community composition by favoring efficient colonizers, particularly C-4 grasses.
Anthropogenic nitrogen (N) enrichment can have complex effects on plant communities. In low-nutrient, primary successional systems such as sand dunes, N enrichment may alter the trajectory of plant community assembly or the dominance of foundational, ecosystem-engineering plants. Predicting the consequences of N enrichment may be complicated by plant interactions with microbial symbionts because increases in a limiting resource, such as N, could alter the costs and benefits of symbiosis. To evaluate the direct and interactive effects of microbial symbiosis and N addition on plant succession, we established a long-term field experiment in Michigan, USA, manipulating the presence of the symbiotic fungal endophyte Epichloe amarillans in Ammophila breviligulata, a dominant ecosystem-engineering dune grass species. From 2016 to 2020, we implemented N fertilization treatments (control, low, high) in a subset of the long-term experiment. N addition suppressed the accumulation of plant diversity over time mainly by reducing species richness of colonizing plants. However, this suppression occurred only when the endophyte was present in Ammophila. Although Epichloe enhanced Ammophila tiller density over time, N addition did not strongly interact with Epichloe symbiosis to influence vegetative growth of Ammophila. Instead, N addition directly altered plant community composition by increasing the abundance of efficient colonizers, especially C-4 grasses. In conclusion, hidden microbial symbionts can alter the consequences of N enrichment on plant primary succession.

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