4.7 Article

Reconstruction of the historical changes in mycorrhizal fungal communities under anthropogenic nitrogen deposition

Journal

PROCEEDINGS OF THE ROYAL SOCIETY B-BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES
Volume 268, Issue 1484, Pages 2479-2484

Publisher

ROYAL SOC
DOI: 10.1098/rspb.2001.1844

Keywords

arbuscular mycorrhizae; diversity; nitrogen saturation; community variation

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Archived soil samples (1937-1999) and historic air quality data from the Los Angeles Basin were used for reconstructing the record of change between atmospheric NOx loads, soil delta N-15 values and the diversity of arbuscular mycorrhizae (AM), which are ubiquitous plant fungus mutualists that control plant community productivity. A tripling of atmospheric NOx loads between 1937 and the 1970s was paralleled by soil nitrogen enrichment (delta N-15 = 3.18). From 1975 onwards, atmospheric NOx declined, but soils became nitrogen saturated (delta N-15 = - 4 and NO3-nitrogen = 171 mg kg(-1)). The shifts in the ANI community followed 28 years of atmospheric nitrogen enrichment and coincided kith the onset of soil nitrogen saturation. Such changes were manifest in the loss of ANI productivity, species richness (one species per year), three genera (Acaulospora, Scutellospora and Gigaspora) in the spore community and Gigaspora within the roots. Nitrogen enrichment also enhanced the proliferation of potentially less mutualistic species of Glomus. Autoregressive models implied that such patterns swill persist and be driven by soil nitrogen cycling patterns. Chronic nitrogen enrichment from air pollution thus alters the diversity and mutualistic functioning of ANI communities, which, in turn, may influence the plant community.

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