Henn Matthew R, Chapela Ignacio H
Division of Ecosystem Sciences, Department of Environmental Science, Policy, and Management, University of California, Berkeley, 151 Hilgard Hall, 94720-3110, Berkeley, CA, USA.
Division of Ecosystem Sciences, Department of Environmental Science, Policy, and Management, University of California, Berkeley, 334 Hilgard Hall, 94720-3110, Berkeley, CA, USA.
Oecologia. 2001 Aug;128(4):480-487. doi: 10.1007/s004420100680. Epub 2001 Aug 1.
To quantify and characterize N and C isotopic fractionation effects due to fungal transformation of organic substrates in forest ecosystems, we performed a field study in California and a meta-analysis of three additional studies conducted by others across the Northern Hemisphere. Basidiomycete fungal biomass was consistently enriched for the heavier isotope for C relative to substrate and either enriched or depleted for N relative to atmospheric N. Extent and pattern of fractionation was very variable, but the distinction between ectomycorrhizal and saprotrophic basidiomycetes was strongly supported, particularly when dual isotope analyses were performed. This differentiation, which we call the "EM-SAP Divide" holds for studies within a restricted ecosystem, but becomes less distinct over larger geographical regions, removing the rationale for using direct isotopic values from single specimens as diagnostic of ecophysiological role. For C, the EM-SAP Divide seems to reflect substrate effects, potentially due to differential access to recently synthesized versus recycled organic compounds, rather than distinct physiological pathways. Once substrate and ecophysiological role effects are removed, our meta-analysis suggests the existence of more than one mechanism causing C fractionations in fungi which is found equally in ectomycorrhizal and saprotrophic fungi. Similarly, a multimodal distribution of δN values suggests that physiological effects may play a much stronger influence on N natural isotopic distributions in fungi. Our meta-analysis provides a firm statistical base to evaluate fungal ecological statements based on natural isotopic distributions of C and N. We call into question the current practice of using direct isotopic measurements to make statements about trophic relationships of fungi in the absence of other supporting evidence.
为了量化和表征森林生态系统中有机底物真菌转化所导致的氮和碳同位素分馏效应,我们在加利福尼亚州进行了一项实地研究,并对北半球其他三项研究进行了荟萃分析。相对于底物,担子菌真菌生物量的碳重同位素持续富集,相对于大气氮,氮则要么富集要么贫化。分馏的程度和模式变化很大,但外生菌根担子菌和腐生担子菌之间的区别得到了有力支持,尤其是在进行双同位素分析时。这种分化,我们称之为“外生菌根 - 腐生菌分界线”,在一个受限的生态系统内的研究中成立,但在更大的地理区域内变得不那么明显,这就消除了使用单个标本的直接同位素值来诊断生态生理作用的理论依据。对于碳来说,外生菌根 - 腐生菌分界线似乎反映了底物效应,这可能是由于获取新合成的有机化合物与循环利用的有机化合物的差异,而不是不同的生理途径。一旦去除底物和生态生理作用的影响,我们的荟萃分析表明,真菌中存在多种导致碳分馏的机制,在外生菌根真菌和腐生真菌中同样存在。同样,δN值的多峰分布表明,生理效应可能对真菌中氮的自然同位素分布产生更强的影响。我们的荟萃分析为基于碳和氮的自然同位素分布来评估真菌生态陈述提供了坚实的统计基础。我们质疑在缺乏其他支持证据的情况下,使用直接同位素测量来陈述真菌营养关系的当前做法。