School of Earth Sciences and Environmental Sustainability, Department of Biological Sciences, Northern Arizona University, Flagstaff, AZ 86011, USA.
Ecol Lett. 2013 May;16 Suppl 1:140-53. doi: 10.1111/ele.12085.
Mycorrhizal symbioses link the biosphere with the lithosphere by mediating nutrient cycles and energy flow though terrestrial ecosystems. A more mechanistic understanding of these plant-fungal associations may help ameliorate anthropogenic changes to C and N cycles and biotic communities. We explore three interacting principles: (1) optimal allocation, (2) biotic context and (3) fungal adaptability that may help predict mycorrhizal responses to carbon dioxide enrichment, nitrogen eutrophication, invasive species and land-use changes. Plant-microbial feedbacks and thresholds are discussed in light of these principles with the goal of generating testable hypotheses. Ideas to develop large-scale collaborative research efforts are presented. It is our hope that mycorrhizal symbioses can be effectively integrated into global change models and eventually their ecology will be understood well enough so that they can be managed to help offset some of the detrimental effects of anthropogenic environmental change.
菌根共生体通过介导营养循环和能量流动将生物圈与岩石圈联系起来,从而影响陆地生态系统。对这些植物-真菌共生体的理解更具机械性,可能有助于缓解人为因素对 C 和 N 循环以及生物群落的改变。我们探讨了三个相互作用的原则:(1)最佳分配,(2)生物背景和(3)真菌适应性,这些原则可能有助于预测菌根对二氧化碳富集、氮富营养化、入侵物种和土地利用变化的反应。根据这些原则讨论了植物-微生物的反馈和阈值,目的是生成可测试的假设。本文提出了一些发展大规模合作研究的想法。我们希望能够将菌根共生体有效地整合到全球变化模型中,并最终对其生态学有足够的了解,以便对其进行管理,以帮助抵消人为环境变化的一些不利影响。