Ectomycorrhiza, Friend or Foe?

被引:14
作者
Agren, Goran, I [1 ]
Hyvonen, Riitta [1 ]
Baskaran, Preetisri [1 ]
机构
[1] Swedish Univ Agr Sci, Dept Ecol, POB 7044, S-75007 Uppsala, Sweden
关键词
allocation; mycorrhiza; nitrogen; parasitism; plant growth; symbiosis; MYCORRHIZAL FUNGI; PREFERENTIAL ALLOCATION; CARBON SEQUESTRATION; NITROGEN LIMITATION; SOIL; STOICHIOMETRY; METAANALYSIS; DECOMPOSERS; MUTUALISM; DYNAMICS;
D O I
10.1007/s10021-019-00356-y
中图分类号
Q14 [生态学(生物生态学)];
学科分类号
071012 ; 0713 ;
摘要
Many ecology textbooks present the interaction between mycorrhizal fungi and their host plants as the archetype of symbiosis or mutualism. However, mycorrhiza drains carbon directly from the plant and also competes with the plant for soil inorganic nitrogen. We developed hypotheses based on a simple model to qualitatively investigate when, in a nitrogen-limited system, the fungal partner returns sufficient extra nitrogen to compensate for the amount of carbon allocated to it by the plant. We showed when the mycorrhizal association can be beneficial to the plant, but also when mycorrhizal immobilization of soil inorganic nitrogen can be a limitation. The amount of carbon and nitrogen that the mycorrhizal fungus can obtain from soil organic matter, by producing extracellular enzymes, is also important. Saprotrophic capability decreases the value of the fungus to the plant, as fungal uptake of soil carbon augments the use of the plant-supplied carbon and increases the fungal requirement for N. The stoichiometric mismatch between low-N soil organic matter and high-N fungal biochemistry turned out to be a bottleneck in making the fungus a net provider of additional N to the plant. The most important properties determining the usefulness to a plant of a mycorrhizal symbiont are plant nitrogen use efficiency and the amount of inorganic N taken up per unit extra fungal growth. The fraction of carbon the fungus allocates to its own growth, relative to its investment in exocellular enzymes, is also a critical property. Our results show that plants could benefit from the association with the fungus, which could explain the ubiquitous nature of this association between fungi and plants.
引用
收藏
页码:1561 / 1572
页数:12
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