4.7 Article

Temporal dynamics of mycorrhizal fungal communities and co-associations with grassland plant communities following experimental manipulation of rainfall

期刊

JOURNAL OF ECOLOGY
卷 108, 期 2, 页码 515-527

出版社

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/1365-2745.13267

关键词

arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi; climate change; community assembly; driver hypothesis; drought; passenger hypothesis; plant-microbe interactions

资金

  1. Western Sydney University
  2. Australian Research Council [DP140103936]
  3. OECD Co-operative Research Programme Secretariat
  4. Stapledon Memorial Trust Travelling Fellowship
  5. Hawkesbury Institute for the Environment Research Exchange Program
  6. Royal Entomological Society Outreach Fund
  7. British Ecological Society
  8. Scottish Government Rural and Environment Science and Analytical Services Division
  9. MICIU
  10. Hermon Slade Foundation
  11. Trade and Agriculture Directorate

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Climate models project overall a reduction in rainfall amounts and shifts in the timing of rainfall events in mid-latitudes and sub-tropical dry regions, which threatens the productivity and diversity of grasslands. Arbuscular mycorrhizal (AM) fungi may help plants to cope with expected changes but may also be impacted by changing rainfall, either via the direct effects of low soil moisture on survival and function or indirectly via changes in the plant community. In an Australian mesic grassland (former pasture) system, we characterized plant and AM fungal communities every 6 months for nearly 4 years to two altered rainfall regimes: (a) ambient, (b) rainfall reduced by 50% relative to ambient over the entire year and (c) total summer rainfall exclusion. Using Illumina sequencing, we assessed the response of AM fungal communities sampled from contrasting rainfall treatments and evaluated whether variation in AM fungal communities was associated with variation in plant community richness and composition. We found that rainfall reduction influenced the fungal communities, with the nature of the response depending on the type of manipulation, but that consistent results were only observed after more than 2 years of rainfall manipulation. We observed significant co-associations between plant and AM fungal communities on multiple dates. Predictive co-correspondence analyses indicated more support for the hypothesis that fungal community composition influenced plant community composition than vice versa. However, we found no evidence that altered rainfall regimes were leading to distinct co-associations between plants and AM fungi. Overall, our results provide evidence that grassland plant communities are intricately tied to variation in AM fungal communities. However, in this system, plant responses to climate change may not be directly related to impacts of altered rainfall regimes on AM fungal communities. Synthesis. Our study shows that arbuscular mycorrhizal (AM) fungal communities respond to changes in rainfall but that this effect was not immediate. The AM fungal community may influence the composition of the plant community. However, our results suggest that plant responses to altered rainfall regimes at our site may not be resulting via changes in the AM fungal communities.

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