Keller Kane R
Kellogg Biological Station and Department of Plant Biology, Michigan State University, Hickory Corners, MI, 49060, USA,
Oecologia. 2014 Dec;176(4):1101-9. doi: 10.1007/s00442-014-3089-1. Epub 2014 Sep 23.
Mutualistic interactions can be just as important to community dynamics as antagonistic species interactions like competition and predation. Because of their large effects on both abiotic and biotic environmental variables, resource mutualisms, in particular, have the potential to influence plant communities. Moreover, the effects of resource mutualists such as nitrogen-fixing rhizobia on diversity and community composition may be more pronounced in nutrient-limited environments. I experimentally manipulated the presence of rhizobia across a nitrogen gradient in early assembling mesocosm communities with identical starting species composition to test how the classic mutualism between nitrogen-fixing rhizobia and their legume host influence diversity and community composition. After harvest, I assessed changes in α-diversity, community composition, β-diversity, and ecosystem properties such as inorganic nitrogen availability and productivity as a result of rhizobia and nitrogen availability. The presence of rhizobia decreased plant community diversity, increased community convergence (reduced β-diversity), altered plant community composition, and increased total community productivity. These community-level effects resulted from rhizobia increasing the competitive dominance of their legume host Chamaecrista fasciculata. Moreover, different non-leguminous species responded both negatively and positively to the presence of rhizobia, indicating that rhizobia are driving both inhibitory and potentially facilitative effects in communities. These findings expand our understanding of plant communities by incorporating the effects of positive symbiotic interactions on plant diversity and composition. In particular, rhizobia that specialize on dominant plants may serve as keystone mutualists in terrestrial plant communities, reducing diversity by more than 40%.
互利共生相互作用对群落动态的重要性,可能与竞争和捕食等对抗性物种相互作用不相上下。特别是资源互利共生关系,由于它们对非生物和生物环境变量都有重大影响,因而具有影响植物群落的潜力。此外,诸如固氮根瘤菌等资源互利共生者对多样性和群落组成的影响,在养分有限的环境中可能更为显著。我通过实验,在起始物种组成相同的早期组装的中型生态系统群落中,沿着氮梯度操纵根瘤菌的存在情况,以测试固氮根瘤菌与其豆科宿主之间的经典互利共生关系如何影响多样性和群落组成。收获后,我评估了根瘤菌和氮有效性导致的α多样性、群落组成、β多样性以及无机氮有效性和生产力等生态系统属性的变化。根瘤菌的存在降低了植物群落多样性,增加了群落趋同性(降低了β多样性),改变了植物群落组成,并提高了群落总生产力。这些群落水平的影响是由于根瘤菌增强了其豆科宿主 fasciculata 决明的竞争优势。此外,不同的非豆科物种对根瘤菌的存在有负面和正面的反应,这表明根瘤菌在群落中既产生抑制作用,也可能产生促进作用。这些发现通过纳入积极共生相互作用对植物多样性和组成的影响,扩展了我们对植物群落的理解。特别是,专性定殖于优势植物的根瘤菌可能是陆地植物群落中的关键互利共生者,使多样性降低超过40%。