Litcius/Paper detail

Community response of arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi to extreme drought in a cold‐temperate grassland

Wei Fu, Baodong Chen, Matthias C. Rillig, Jan Jansa, Wang Ma, Chong Xu, Wentao Luo, Honghui Wu, Honghui Wu, Zhipeng Hao, Hui Wu, Hui Wu, Aihua Zhao, Qiang Yu, Xingguo Han

2021New Phytologist92 citationsDOI

Abstract

Climate extremes pose enormous threats to natural ecosystems. Arbuscular mycorrhizal (AM) fungi are key plant symbionts that can affect plant community dynamics and ecosystem stability. However, knowledge about how AM fungal communities respond to climate extremes in natural ecosystems remains elusive. Based on a grassland extreme drought experiment in Inner Mongolia, we investigated the response of AM fungal communities to extreme drought in association with plant communities. The experiment simulated two types of extreme drought (chronic/intense) of once-in-20-year occurrence. AM fungal richness and community composition exhibited high sensitivity to extreme drought and were more sensitive to intense drought than chronic drought. This community sensitivity (i.e. decline in richness and shifts in community composition) of AM fungi can be jointly explained by soil moisture, plant richness, and aboveground productivity. Notably, the robustness of the plant-AM fungal community co-response increased with drought intensity. Our results indicate that AM fungal communities are sensitive to climate extremes, and we propose that the plant community mediates AM fungal community responses. Given the ubiquitous nature of AM associations, their climate sensitivity may have profound consequences on plant communities and ecosystem stability under climate change.

Topics & Concepts

Species richnessEcosystemPlant communityClimate changeTemperate climateEcologyGrasslandBiologyBiodiversityEnvironmental scienceMycorrhizal Fungi and Plant InteractionsEcology and Vegetation Dynamics StudiesPlant Parasitism and Resistance