4.5 Article

Plant invasion impacts on fungal community structure and function depend on soil warming and nitrogen enrichment

期刊

OECOLOGIA
卷 194, 期 4, 页码 659-672

出版社

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00442-020-04797-4

关键词

Arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi; Ectomycorrhizal fungi; Invasive species; Soil warming; Nitrogen deposition

类别

资金

  1. U.S. Department of Defense Strategic Environmental Research and Development Program (SERDP) Grant [NRC2326]
  2. NSF Long Term Ecological Research Program (LTER) [DEB-1832110]
  3. Long Term Research in Environmental Biology grant (LTREB) [DEB-1456610]
  4. National Science Foundation [DGE 1450271]
  5. University of New Hampshire

向作者/读者索取更多资源

The impacts of invasive species on biodiversity may be mitigated or exacerbated by abiotic environmental changes. Invasive plants can restructure soil fungal communities with important implications for native biodiversity and nutrient cycling, yet fungal responses to invasion may depend on numerous anthropogenic stressors. In this study, we experimentally invaded a long-term soil warming and simulated nitrogen deposition experiment with the widespread invasive plant Alliaria petiolata (garlic mustard) and tested the responses of soil fungal communities to invasion, abiotic factors, and their interaction. We focused on the phytotoxic garlic mustard because it suppresses native mycorrhizae across forests of North America. We found that invasion in combination with warming, but not under ambient conditions or elevated nitrogen, significantly reduced soil fungal biomass and ectomycorrhizal relative abundances and increased relative abundances of general soil saprotrophs and fungal genes encoding for hydrolytic enzymes. These results suggest that warming potentially exacerbates fungal responses to plant invasion. Soils collected from uninvaded and invaded plots across eight forests spanning a 4 degrees C temperature gradient further demonstrated that the magnitude of fungal responses to invasion was positively correlated with mean annual temperature. Our study is one of the first empirical tests to show that the impacts of invasion on fungal communities depends on additional anthropogenic pressures and were greater in concert with warming than under elevated nitrogen or ambient conditions.

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