Shifts in mycorrhizal types of fungi and plants in response to fertilisation, warming and herbivory in a tundra grassland

Abstract: Climate warming is severely affecting high-latitude regions. In the Arctic tundra, it may lead to enhanced soil nutrient availability and interact with simultaneous changes in grazing pressure. It is presently unknown how these concurrently occurring global change drivers affect the root-a...

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Published in:New Phytologist
Main Authors: Le Noir de Carlan, Coline, Kaarlejarvi, Elina, De Tender, Caroline, Heinecke, Thilo, Eskelinen, Anu, Verbruggen, Erik
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: 2024
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10067/2060160151162165141
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spelling ftunivantwerpen:c:irua:206016 2024-06-23T07:50:32+00:00 Shifts in mycorrhizal types of fungi and plants in response to fertilisation, warming and herbivory in a tundra grassland Le Noir de Carlan, Coline Kaarlejarvi, Elina De Tender, Caroline Heinecke, Thilo Eskelinen, Anu Verbruggen, Erik 2024 https://hdl.handle.net/10067/2060160151162165141 eng eng info:eu-repo/semantics/altIdentifier/doi/10.1111/NPH.19816 info:eu-repo/semantics/altIdentifier/isi/001220955000001 info:eu-repo/semantics/embargoedAccess 0028-646X New phytologist Biology info:eu-repo/semantics/article 2024 ftunivantwerpen https://doi.org/10.1111/NPH.19816 2024-06-04T14:20:12Z Abstract: Climate warming is severely affecting high-latitude regions. In the Arctic tundra, it may lead to enhanced soil nutrient availability and interact with simultaneous changes in grazing pressure. It is presently unknown how these concurrently occurring global change drivers affect the root-associated fungal communities, particularly mycorrhizal fungi, and whether changes coincide with shifts in plant mycorrhizal types. We investigated changes in root-associated fungal communities and mycorrhizal types of the plant community in a 10-yr factorial experiment with warming, fertilisation and grazing exclusion in a Finnish tundra grassland. The strongest determinant of the root-associated fungal community was fertilisation, which consistently increased potential plant pathogen abundance and had contrasting effects on the different mycorrhizal fungal types, contingent on other treatments. Plant mycorrhizal types went through pronounced shifts, with warming favouring ecto- and ericoid mycorrhiza but not under fertilisation and grazing exclusion. Combination of all treatments resulted in dominance by arbuscular mycorrhizal plants. However, shifts in plant mycorrhizal types vs fungi were mostly but not always aligned in their magnitude and direction. Our results show that our ability to predict shifts in symbiotic and antagonistic fungal communities depend on simultaneous consideration of multiple global change factors that jointly alter plant and fungal communities. Article in Journal/Newspaper Arctic Tundra IRUA - Institutional Repository van de Universiteit Antwerpen Arctic New Phytologist
institution Open Polar
collection IRUA - Institutional Repository van de Universiteit Antwerpen
op_collection_id ftunivantwerpen
language English
topic Biology
spellingShingle Biology
Le Noir de Carlan, Coline
Kaarlejarvi, Elina
De Tender, Caroline
Heinecke, Thilo
Eskelinen, Anu
Verbruggen, Erik
Shifts in mycorrhizal types of fungi and plants in response to fertilisation, warming and herbivory in a tundra grassland
topic_facet Biology
description Abstract: Climate warming is severely affecting high-latitude regions. In the Arctic tundra, it may lead to enhanced soil nutrient availability and interact with simultaneous changes in grazing pressure. It is presently unknown how these concurrently occurring global change drivers affect the root-associated fungal communities, particularly mycorrhizal fungi, and whether changes coincide with shifts in plant mycorrhizal types. We investigated changes in root-associated fungal communities and mycorrhizal types of the plant community in a 10-yr factorial experiment with warming, fertilisation and grazing exclusion in a Finnish tundra grassland. The strongest determinant of the root-associated fungal community was fertilisation, which consistently increased potential plant pathogen abundance and had contrasting effects on the different mycorrhizal fungal types, contingent on other treatments. Plant mycorrhizal types went through pronounced shifts, with warming favouring ecto- and ericoid mycorrhiza but not under fertilisation and grazing exclusion. Combination of all treatments resulted in dominance by arbuscular mycorrhizal plants. However, shifts in plant mycorrhizal types vs fungi were mostly but not always aligned in their magnitude and direction. Our results show that our ability to predict shifts in symbiotic and antagonistic fungal communities depend on simultaneous consideration of multiple global change factors that jointly alter plant and fungal communities.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Le Noir de Carlan, Coline
Kaarlejarvi, Elina
De Tender, Caroline
Heinecke, Thilo
Eskelinen, Anu
Verbruggen, Erik
author_facet Le Noir de Carlan, Coline
Kaarlejarvi, Elina
De Tender, Caroline
Heinecke, Thilo
Eskelinen, Anu
Verbruggen, Erik
author_sort Le Noir de Carlan, Coline
title Shifts in mycorrhizal types of fungi and plants in response to fertilisation, warming and herbivory in a tundra grassland
title_short Shifts in mycorrhizal types of fungi and plants in response to fertilisation, warming and herbivory in a tundra grassland
title_full Shifts in mycorrhizal types of fungi and plants in response to fertilisation, warming and herbivory in a tundra grassland
title_fullStr Shifts in mycorrhizal types of fungi and plants in response to fertilisation, warming and herbivory in a tundra grassland
title_full_unstemmed Shifts in mycorrhizal types of fungi and plants in response to fertilisation, warming and herbivory in a tundra grassland
title_sort shifts in mycorrhizal types of fungi and plants in response to fertilisation, warming and herbivory in a tundra grassland
publishDate 2024
url https://hdl.handle.net/10067/2060160151162165141
geographic Arctic
geographic_facet Arctic
genre Arctic
Tundra
genre_facet Arctic
Tundra
op_source 0028-646X
New phytologist
op_relation info:eu-repo/semantics/altIdentifier/doi/10.1111/NPH.19816
info:eu-repo/semantics/altIdentifier/isi/001220955000001
op_rights info:eu-repo/semantics/embargoedAccess
op_doi https://doi.org/10.1111/NPH.19816
container_title New Phytologist
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