Department of Biology, West Virginia University, Morgantown, WV, USA.
Department of Soil Science, University of Wisconsin-Madison, Madison, WI, USA.
Glob Chang Biol. 2021 May;27(10):2049-2060. doi: 10.1111/gcb.15523. Epub 2021 Feb 9.
While the effect of nitrogen (N) deposition on belowground carbon (C) cycling varies, emerging evidence shows that forest soils dominated by trees that associate with ectomycorrhizal fungi (ECM) store more C than soils dominated by trees that associate with arbuscular mycorrhizae (AM) with increasing N deposition. We hypothesized that this is due to unique nutrient cycling responses to N between AM and ECM-dominated soils. ECM trees primarily obtain N through fungal mining of soil organic matter subsidized by root-C. As such, we expected the largest N-induced responses of C and N cycling to occur in ECM rhizospheres and be driven by fungi. Conversely, as AM trees rely on bacterial scavengers in bulk soils to cycle N, we predicted the largest AM responses to be driven by shifts in bacteria and occur in bulk soils. To test this hypothesis, we measured microbial community composition, metatranscriptome profiles, and extracellular enzyme activity in bulk, rhizosphere, and organic horizon (OH) soils in AM and ECM-dominated soils at Bear Brook Watershed in Maine, USA. After 27 years of N fertilization, fungal community composition shifted across ECM soils, but bacterial communities shifted across AM soils. These shifts were mirrored by enhanced C relative to N mining enzyme activities in both mycorrhizal types, but this occurred in different soil fractions. In ECM stands these shifts occurred in rhizosphere soils, but in AM stands they occurred in bulk soils. Additionally, ECM OH soils exhibited the opposite response with declines in C relative to N mining. As rhizosphere soils account for only a small portion of total soil volume relative to bulk soils, coupled with declines in C to N enzyme activity in ECM OH soils, we posit that this may partly explain why ECM soils store more C than AM soils as N inputs increase.
虽然氮(N)沉积对地下碳(C)循环的影响各不相同,但新出现的证据表明,随着 N 沉积的增加,与外生菌根真菌(ECM)相关的树木为主导的森林土壤比与丛枝菌根(AM)相关的树木为主导的土壤储存更多的 C。我们假设这是由于 AM 和 ECM 主导的土壤之间对 N 的独特养分循环反应所致。ECM 树木主要通过真菌从土壤有机质中挖掘 N 来获得 N,这些有机质由根系-C 提供。因此,我们预计 ECM 根际中会发生最大的 N 诱导的 C 和 N 循环响应,并且由真菌驱动。相反,由于 AM 树木依赖于大块土壤中的细菌来循环 N,我们预测 AM 的最大响应将由细菌的变化驱动,并发生在大块土壤中。为了验证这一假设,我们测量了美国缅因州 Bear Brook 流域 AM 和 ECM 主导土壤中的大块土壤、根际和有机层(OH)土壤中的微生物群落组成、宏转录组谱和细胞外酶活性。在 N 施肥 27 年后,ECM 土壤中的真菌群落组成发生了变化,而 AM 土壤中的细菌群落发生了变化。这两种类型的菌根中相对 N 矿化酶活性的增强反映了这种变化,但这种变化发生在不同的土壤部分。在 ECM 立地中,这些变化发生在根际土壤中,但在 AM 立地中,它们发生在大块土壤中。此外,ECM OH 土壤表现出相反的反应,即相对 N 矿化的 C 减少。由于根际土壤相对于大块土壤仅占土壤总体积的一小部分,再加上 ECM OH 土壤中 C 与 N 酶活性的下降,我们推测这可能部分解释了为什么随着 N 输入的增加,ECM 土壤比 AM 土壤储存更多的 C。