4.8 Article

Soil fungal mycelia have unexpectedly flexible stoichiometric C:N and C:P ratios

Journal

ECOLOGY LETTERS
Volume 24, Issue 2, Pages 208-218

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/ele.13632

Keywords

C; N; P ratios; element homeostasis; fungal nutrient retranslocation; microbial carbon sequestration; mycelial growth; nutrient limitations; saprobic fungi; soil ecological stoichiometry; soil nutrient cycling

Categories

Funding

  1. ERC Advanced Grant [694368]
  2. ProjektDEAL
  3. European Research Council (ERC) [694368] Funding Source: European Research Council (ERC)

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The study revealed unexpected high flexibility in C:N and C:P values of saprobic fungi along nutrient supply gradients, questioning microbial homeostasis. Fungal N:P varied less due to simultaneous reductions in mycelial N and P contents. Internal recycling processes and reduced N and P uptake during mycelial growth may be more relevant than element storage.
Soil ecological stoichiometry provides powerful theories to integrate the complex interplay of element cycling and microbial communities into biogeochemical models. One essential assumption is that microbes maintain stable C:N:P (carbon:nitrogen:phosphorus) ratios independent of resource supply, although such homeostatic regulations have rarely been assessed in individual microorganisms. Here, we report an unexpected high flexibility in C:N and C:P values of saprobic fungi along nutrient supply gradients, overall ranging between 7-126 and 20-1488, respectively, questioning microbial homeostasis. Fungal N:P varied comparatively less due to simultaneous reductions in mycelial N and P contents. As a mechanism, internal recycling processes during mycelial growth and an overall reduced N and P uptake appear more relevant than element storage. The relationships among fungal stoichiometry and growth disappeared in more complex media. These findings affect our interpretation of stoichiometric imbalances among microbes and soils and are highly relevant for developing microbial soil organic carbon and nitrogen models.

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