Department of Ecological Science, Vrije Universiteit, De Boelelaan 108, 1081 HV Amsterdam, the Netherlands.
Department of Zoology, University of Oxford, 11a Mansfield Road, Oxford OX1 3SZ, UK; Balliol College, University of Oxford, Oxford OX1 3BJ, UK.
Curr Biol. 2019 Jun 17;29(12):2043-2050.e8. doi: 10.1016/j.cub.2019.04.061. Epub 2019 Jun 6.
The world's ecosystems are characterized by an unequal distribution of resources [1]. Trade partnerships between organisms of different species-mutualisms-can help individuals cope with such resource inequality [2-4]. Trade allows individuals to exchange commodities they can provide at low cost for resources that are otherwise impossible or more difficult to access [5, 6]. However, as resources become increasingly patchy in time or space, it is unknown how organisms alter their trading strategies [7, 8]. Here, we show how a symbiotic fungus mediates trade with a host root in response to different levels of resource inequality across its network. We developed a quantum-dot-tracking technique to quantify phosphorus-trading strategies of arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi simultaneously exposed to rich and poor resource patches. By following fluorescent nanoparticles of different colors across fungal networks, we determined where phosphorus was hoarded, relocated, and transferred to plant hosts. We found that increasing exposure to inequality stimulated trade. Fungi responded to high resource variation by (1) increasing the total amount of phosphorus distributed to host roots, (2) decreasing allocation to storage, and (3) differentially moving resources within the network from rich to poor patches. Using single-particle tracking and high-resolution video, we show how dynamic resource movement may help the fungus capitalize on value differences across the trade network, physically moving resources to areas of high demand to gain better returns. Such translocation strategies can help symbiotic organisms cope with exposure to resource inequality.
世界生态系统的特点是资源分配不均[1]。不同物种之间的贸易伙伴关系——互利共生关系——可以帮助个体应对这种资源不平等[2-4]。贸易使个体能够将他们可以低成本提供的商品交换为其他情况下不可能或更难获得的资源[5,6]。然而,随着资源在时间或空间上变得越来越不均匀,目前还不清楚生物体如何改变它们的交易策略[7,8]。在这里,我们展示了一种共生真菌如何响应其网络中不同程度的资源不平等,与宿主根系进行交易。我们开发了一种量子点跟踪技术,以定量测量同时暴露在丰富和贫瘠资源斑块中的丛枝菌根真菌的磷交换策略。通过跟踪不同颜色的荧光纳米颗粒在真菌网络中的移动,我们确定了磷被储存、重新分配和转移到植物宿主的位置。我们发现,暴露于不平等程度的增加会刺激交易。真菌通过以下三种方式对高资源变化做出反应:(1)增加分配给宿主根系的磷总量;(2)减少对储存的分配;(3)在网络中从丰富斑块向贫瘠斑块转移资源。通过使用单粒子跟踪和高分辨率视频,我们展示了动态资源移动如何帮助真菌利用贸易网络中的价值差异,将资源物理移动到高需求区域以获得更好的回报。这种转运策略可以帮助共生生物应对资源不平等的暴露。