Edwards Joseph D, Kazenel Melanie R, Luo Yiqi, Lynn Joshua S, McCulley Rebecca L, Souza Lara, Young Carolyn, Rudgers Jennifer A, Kivlin Stephanie N
Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, The University of Tennessee, Knoxville, Tennessee, USA.
Department of Biology, The University of New Mexico, Albuquerque, New Mexico, USA.
Glob Chang Biol. 2025 Apr;31(4):e70207. doi: 10.1111/gcb.70207.
Disruptions to functionally important symbionts with global change will negatively impact plant fitness, with broader consequences for species' abundances, distribution, and community composition. Fungal endophytes that live inside plant leaves and roots could potentially mitigate plant heat stress from global warming. Conversely, disruptions of these symbioses could exacerbate the negative impacts of warming. To better understand the consistency and strength of warming-induced changes to fungal endophytes, we examined fungal leaf and root endophytes in three grassland warming experiments in the US ranging from 2 to 25 years and spanning 2000 km, 12°C of mean annual temperature, and 600 mm of precipitation. We found that experimental warming disrupted symbiosis between plants and fungal endophytes. Colonization of plant tissues by septate fungi decreased in response to warming by 90% in plant leaves and 35% in roots. Warming also reduced fungal diversity and changed community composition in plant leaves, but not roots. The strength, but not direction, of warming effects on fungal endophytes varied by up to 75% among warming experiments. Finally, warming decoupled fungal endophytes from host metabolism by decreasing the correlation between endophyte community and host metabolome dissimilarity. These effects were strongest in the shorter-term experiment, suggesting endophyte-host metabolome function may acclimate to warming over decades. Overall, warming-driven disruption of fungal endophyte community structure and function suggests that this symbiosis may not be a reliable mechanism to promote plant resilience and ameliorate stress responses under global change.
全球变化对功能重要的共生体造成的破坏将对植物适应性产生负面影响,并对物种丰富度、分布和群落组成产生更广泛的影响。生活在植物叶片和根部内部的真菌内生菌有可能减轻全球变暖给植物带来的热应激。相反,这些共生关系的破坏可能会加剧变暖的负面影响。为了更好地了解变暖对真菌内生菌影响的一致性和强度,我们在美国的三个草地变暖实验中研究了真菌叶片和根部内生菌,这些实验持续了2至25年,跨度达2000公里,年平均温度为12°C,降水量为600毫米。我们发现,实验性变暖破坏了植物与真菌内生菌之间的共生关系。随着变暖,分隔真菌在植物组织中的定殖率在叶片中下降了90%,在根部下降了35%。变暖还降低了真菌多样性,并改变了植物叶片中的群落组成,但对根部没有影响。在不同的变暖实验中,变暖对真菌内生菌影响的强度(而非方向)差异高达75%。最后,变暖通过降低内生菌群落与宿主代谢组差异之间的相关性,使真菌内生菌与宿主代谢脱钩。这些影响在短期实验中最为明显,表明内生菌-宿主代谢组功能可能会在几十年内适应变暖。总体而言,变暖导致的真菌内生菌群落结构和功能破坏表明,这种共生关系可能不是促进植物恢复力和改善全球变化下应激反应的可靠机制。