4.7 Article

Favorable effect of mycorrhizae on biomass production efficiency exceeds their carbon cost in a fertilization experiment

Journal

ECOLOGY
Volume 99, Issue 11, Pages 2525-2534

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/ecy.2502

Keywords

arbuscular mycorrhizae; biomass production efficiency; carbon allocation; carbon use efficiency; mesocosm experiment; nitrogen; nutrient availability; phosphorus

Categories

Funding

  1. Research Foundation - Flanders (FWO)
  2. European Research Council [ERC-SyG-610028 IMBALANCE-P]
  3. ClimMani COST Action [ES1308]
  4. Methusalem of the Research Council UA

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Biomass production efficiency (BPE), the ratio of biomass production to photosynthesis, varies greatly among ecosystems and typically increases with increasing nutrient availability. Reduced carbon partitioning to mycorrhizal fungi (i.e., per unit photosynthesis) is the hypothesized underlying mechanism, as mycorrhizal abundance and plant dependence on these symbionts typically decrease with increasing nutrient availability. In a mesocosm experiment with Zea mays, we investigated the effect of nitrogen (N) and phosphorus (P) addition and of mycorrhizal inoculation on BPE. Photosynthesis and respiration were measured at mesocosm scale and at leaf scale. The growth of arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi (AMF) was assessed with ingrowth bags while also making use of the difference in delta C-13 between C-4 plants and C-3 soil. Mesocosms without AMF, that is, with pasteurized soil, were used to further explore the role of AMF. Plant growth, photosynthesis, and BPE were positively affected by P, but not by N addition. AMF biomass also was slightly higher under P addition, but carbon partitioning to AMF was significantly lower than without P addition. Interestingly, in the absence of AMF, plants that did not receive P died prematurely. Our study confirmed the hypothesis that BPE increases with increasing nutrient availability, and that carbon partitioning to AMF plays a key role in this nutrient effect. The comparison of inoculated vs. pasteurized mesocosms further suggested a lower carbon cost of nutrient uptake via AMF than via other mechanisms under nutrient rich conditions.

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