Hawkesbury Institute for the Environment, University of Western Sydney, Penrith, New South Wales, Australia.
PLoS One. 2013 Nov 18;8(11):e79479. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0079479. eCollection 2013.
Predicted increases in atmospheric carbon dioxide (CO2) are widely anticipated to increase biomass accumulation by accelerating rates of photosynthesis in many plant taxa. Little, however, is known about how soil-borne plant antagonists might modify the effects of elevated CO2 (eCO2), with root-feeding insects being particularly understudied. Root damage by insects often reduces rates of photosynthesis by disrupting root function and imposing water deficits. These insects therefore have considerable potential for modifying plant responses to eCO2. We investigated how root damage by a soil-dwelling insect (Xylotrupes gideon australicus) modified the responses of Eucalyptus globulus to eCO2. eCO2 increased plant height when E. globulus were 14 weeks old and continued to do so at an accelerated rate compared to those grown at ambient CO2 (aCO2). Plants exposed to root-damaging insects showed a rapid decline in growth rates thereafter. In eCO2, shoot and root biomass increased by 46 and 35%, respectively, in insect-free plants but these effects were arrested when soil-dwelling insects were present so that plants were the same size as those grown at aCO2. Specific leaf mass increased by 29% under eCO2, but at eCO2 root damage caused it to decline by 16%, similar to values seen in plants at aCO2 without root damage. Leaf C:N ratio increased by >30% at eCO2 as a consequence of declining leaf N concentrations, but this change was also moderated by soil insects. Soil insects also reduced leaf water content by 9% at eCO2, which potentially arose through impaired water uptake by the roots. We hypothesise that this may have impaired photosynthetic activity to the extent that observed plant responses to eCO2 no longer occurred. In conclusion, soil-dwelling insects could modify plant responses to eCO2 predicted by climate change plant growth models.
预计大气中二氧化碳(CO2)的增加将通过加速许多植物类群的光合作用速率,从而增加生物量积累。然而,人们对土壤传播的植物病原体如何改变升高的 CO2(eCO2)的影响知之甚少,其中根食性昆虫的研究尤其不足。昆虫对根的损害常常通过破坏根的功能和造成水分亏缺来降低光合作用速率。因此,这些昆虫具有相当大的潜力来改变植物对 eCO2 的反应。我们研究了土壤中生活的昆虫(Xylotrupes gideon australicus)对 eCO2 下桉树响应的影响。当桉树 14 周大时,eCO2 增加了植物的高度,并且与在环境 CO2(aCO2)下生长的植物相比,生长速度加快。此后,暴露于根损伤昆虫的植物的生长速度迅速下降。在 eCO2 下,无昆虫的植物的地上和根生物量分别增加了 46%和 35%,但当土壤中的昆虫存在时,这些效应被阻止,因此植物的大小与在 aCO2 下生长的植物相同。在 eCO2 下,比叶质量增加了 29%,但由于根损伤,它下降了 16%,与没有根损伤的 aCO2 下的植物的值相似。叶片 C:N 比因叶片氮浓度下降而增加了 >30%,但土壤昆虫也使这种变化得到缓和。土壤昆虫还使叶片含水量在 eCO2 下降低了 9%,这可能是由于根部吸水受损所致。我们假设,这可能会损害光合作用的程度,以至于不再观察到植物对 eCO2 的反应。总之,土壤中生活的昆虫可能会改变气候变化植物生长模型预测的植物对 eCO2 的反应。