Wildfire severity reduces richness and alters composition of soil fungal communities in boreal forests of western Canada

© 2019 John Wiley & Sons Ltd Wildfire is the dominant disturbance in boreal forests and fire activity is increasing in these regions. Soil fungal communities are important for plant growth and nutrient cycling postfire but there is little understanding of how fires impact fungal communities acro...

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Main Authors: Nicola Day, KE Dunfield, JF Johnstone, MC Mack, MR Turetsky, XJ Walker, AL White, JL Baltzer
Format: Other Non-Article Part of Journal/Newspaper
Language:unknown
Published: 2019
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.26686/wgtn.14330723.v1
https://figshare.com/articles/journal_contribution/Wildfire_severity_reduces_richness_and_alters_composition_of_soil_fungal_communities_in_boreal_forests_of_western_Canada/14330723
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spelling ftvictoriauwfig:oai:figshare.com:article/14330723 2023-05-15T17:46:37+02:00 Wildfire severity reduces richness and alters composition of soil fungal communities in boreal forests of western Canada Nicola Day KE Dunfield JF Johnstone MC Mack MR Turetsky XJ Walker AL White JL Baltzer 2019-07-01T00:00:00Z https://doi.org/10.26686/wgtn.14330723.v1 https://figshare.com/articles/journal_contribution/Wildfire_severity_reduces_richness_and_alters_composition_of_soil_fungal_communities_in_boreal_forests_of_western_Canada/14330723 unknown doi:10.26686/wgtn.14330723.v1 https://figshare.com/articles/journal_contribution/Wildfire_severity_reduces_richness_and_alters_composition_of_soil_fungal_communities_in_boreal_forests_of_western_Canada/14330723 CC BY-NC-ND 4.0 CC-BY-NC-ND Uncategorized disturbance functional groups global change mycorrhizas saprotrophs Taiga Plains understory Soil Canada Northwest Territories Forests Taiga Mycobiome Wildfires Ecology Environmental Sciences Biological Sciences Text Journal contribution 2019 ftvictoriauwfig https://doi.org/10.26686/wgtn.14330723.v1 2021-06-29T18:52:33Z © 2019 John Wiley & Sons Ltd Wildfire is the dominant disturbance in boreal forests and fire activity is increasing in these regions. Soil fungal communities are important for plant growth and nutrient cycling postfire but there is little understanding of how fires impact fungal communities across landscapes, fire severity gradients, and stand types in boreal forests. Understanding relationships between fungal community composition, particularly mycorrhizas, and understory plant composition is therefore important in predicting how future fire regimes may affect vegetation. We used an extreme wildfire event in boreal forests of Canada's Northwest Territories to test drivers of fungal communities and assess relationships with plant communities. We sampled soils from 39 plots 1 year after fire and 8 unburned plots. High-throughput sequencing (MiSeq, ITS) revealed 2,034 fungal operational taxonomic units. We found soil pH and fire severity (proportion soil organic layer combusted), and interactions between these drivers were important for fungal community structure (composition, richness, diversity, functional groups). Where fire severity was low, samples with low pH had higher total fungal, mycorrhizal, and saprotroph richness compared to where severity was high. Increased fire severity caused declines in richness of total fungi, mycorrhizas, and saprotrophs, and declines in diversity of total fungi and mycorrhizas. The importance of stand age (a surrogate for fire return interval) for fungal composition suggests we could detect long-term successional patterns even after fire. Mycorrhizal and plant community composition, richness, and diversity were weakly but significantly correlated. These weak relationships and the distribution of fungi across plots suggest that the underlying driver of fungal community structure is pH, which is modified by fire severity. This study shows the importance of edaphic factors in determining fungal community structure at large scales, but suggests these patterns are mediated by ... Other Non-Article Part of Journal/Newspaper Northwest Territories taiga Taiga plains Open Access Victoria University of Wellington / Te Herenga Waka Canada Northwest Territories
institution Open Polar
collection Open Access Victoria University of Wellington / Te Herenga Waka
op_collection_id ftvictoriauwfig
language unknown
topic Uncategorized
disturbance
functional groups
global change
mycorrhizas
saprotrophs
Taiga Plains
understory
Soil
Canada
Northwest Territories
Forests
Taiga
Mycobiome
Wildfires
Ecology
Environmental Sciences
Biological Sciences
spellingShingle Uncategorized
disturbance
functional groups
global change
mycorrhizas
saprotrophs
Taiga Plains
understory
Soil
Canada
Northwest Territories
Forests
Taiga
Mycobiome
Wildfires
Ecology
Environmental Sciences
Biological Sciences
Nicola Day
KE Dunfield
JF Johnstone
MC Mack
MR Turetsky
XJ Walker
AL White
JL Baltzer
Wildfire severity reduces richness and alters composition of soil fungal communities in boreal forests of western Canada
topic_facet Uncategorized
disturbance
functional groups
global change
mycorrhizas
saprotrophs
Taiga Plains
understory
Soil
Canada
Northwest Territories
Forests
Taiga
Mycobiome
Wildfires
Ecology
Environmental Sciences
Biological Sciences
description © 2019 John Wiley & Sons Ltd Wildfire is the dominant disturbance in boreal forests and fire activity is increasing in these regions. Soil fungal communities are important for plant growth and nutrient cycling postfire but there is little understanding of how fires impact fungal communities across landscapes, fire severity gradients, and stand types in boreal forests. Understanding relationships between fungal community composition, particularly mycorrhizas, and understory plant composition is therefore important in predicting how future fire regimes may affect vegetation. We used an extreme wildfire event in boreal forests of Canada's Northwest Territories to test drivers of fungal communities and assess relationships with plant communities. We sampled soils from 39 plots 1 year after fire and 8 unburned plots. High-throughput sequencing (MiSeq, ITS) revealed 2,034 fungal operational taxonomic units. We found soil pH and fire severity (proportion soil organic layer combusted), and interactions between these drivers were important for fungal community structure (composition, richness, diversity, functional groups). Where fire severity was low, samples with low pH had higher total fungal, mycorrhizal, and saprotroph richness compared to where severity was high. Increased fire severity caused declines in richness of total fungi, mycorrhizas, and saprotrophs, and declines in diversity of total fungi and mycorrhizas. The importance of stand age (a surrogate for fire return interval) for fungal composition suggests we could detect long-term successional patterns even after fire. Mycorrhizal and plant community composition, richness, and diversity were weakly but significantly correlated. These weak relationships and the distribution of fungi across plots suggest that the underlying driver of fungal community structure is pH, which is modified by fire severity. This study shows the importance of edaphic factors in determining fungal community structure at large scales, but suggests these patterns are mediated by ...
format Other Non-Article Part of Journal/Newspaper
author Nicola Day
KE Dunfield
JF Johnstone
MC Mack
MR Turetsky
XJ Walker
AL White
JL Baltzer
author_facet Nicola Day
KE Dunfield
JF Johnstone
MC Mack
MR Turetsky
XJ Walker
AL White
JL Baltzer
author_sort Nicola Day
title Wildfire severity reduces richness and alters composition of soil fungal communities in boreal forests of western Canada
title_short Wildfire severity reduces richness and alters composition of soil fungal communities in boreal forests of western Canada
title_full Wildfire severity reduces richness and alters composition of soil fungal communities in boreal forests of western Canada
title_fullStr Wildfire severity reduces richness and alters composition of soil fungal communities in boreal forests of western Canada
title_full_unstemmed Wildfire severity reduces richness and alters composition of soil fungal communities in boreal forests of western Canada
title_sort wildfire severity reduces richness and alters composition of soil fungal communities in boreal forests of western canada
publishDate 2019
url https://doi.org/10.26686/wgtn.14330723.v1
https://figshare.com/articles/journal_contribution/Wildfire_severity_reduces_richness_and_alters_composition_of_soil_fungal_communities_in_boreal_forests_of_western_Canada/14330723
geographic Canada
Northwest Territories
geographic_facet Canada
Northwest Territories
genre Northwest Territories
taiga
Taiga plains
genre_facet Northwest Territories
taiga
Taiga plains
op_relation doi:10.26686/wgtn.14330723.v1
https://figshare.com/articles/journal_contribution/Wildfire_severity_reduces_richness_and_alters_composition_of_soil_fungal_communities_in_boreal_forests_of_western_Canada/14330723
op_rights CC BY-NC-ND 4.0
op_rightsnorm CC-BY-NC-ND
op_doi https://doi.org/10.26686/wgtn.14330723.v1
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