Fire Reduces Fungal Species Richness and In Situ Mycorrhizal Colonization: A Meta-Analysis

被引:0
|
作者
Nicholas C. Dove
Stephen C. Hart
机构
[1] University of California,Environmental Systems Graduate Group
[2] University of California,Life and Environmental Sciences and the Sierra Nevada Research Institute
来源
Fire Ecology | 2017年 / 13卷
关键词
biodiversity; fungi; mycorrhizae; soil ecology;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Soil fungal communities perform many functions that help plants meet their nutritional demands. However, overall trends for fungal response to fire, which can be especially critical in a post-fire context, have been difficult to elucidate. We used meta-analytical techniques to investigate fungal response to fire across studies, ecosystems, and fire types. Change in fungal species richness and mycorrhizal colonization were used as the effect size metrics in random effects models. When different types of methods for assessing fungal species richness and mycorrhizal colonization were considered together, there was an average reduction of 28 % in fungal species richness post fire, but no significant response in mycorrhizal colonization. In contrast, there was a 41 % reduction in fungal species richness post fire when assessed by sporocarp surveys, but fungal species richness was not significantly affected when assessed by molecular methods. Measured in situ, fire reduced mycorrhizal colonization by 21 %, yet no significant response occurred when assessed by ex situ bioassays. These findings suggest that the putative magnitude of fire effects on soil fungal communities may be dependent on the approach and assessment method used. Furthermore, biome, but not fire type (i.e., wildfire versus prescribed fire) was a significant moderator of our categorical models, suggesting that biome might be a more useful predictor of fungal species richness response to fire than fire type. Reductions in fungal species richness and in situ mycorrhizal colonization post fire declined logarithmically and approached zero (i.e., no effect) at 22 and 11 years, respectively. We concluded that fire reduces fungal species richness and in situ mycorrhizal colonization, but if conditions allow communities to recover (e.g., without subsequent disturbance, favorable growing conditions), soil fungi are resilient on decadal time scales; the resiliency of soil fungi likely contributes to the overall rapid ecosystem recovery following fire.
引用
收藏
页码:37 / 65
页数:28
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] FIRE REDUCES FUNGAL SPECIES RICHNESS AND IN SITU MYCORRHIZAL COLONIZATION: A META-ANALYSIS
    Dove, Nicholas C.
    Hart, Stephen C.
    FIRE ECOLOGY, 2017, 13 (02): : 37 - 65
  • [2] Hemiparasitic plants increase alpine plant richness and evenness but reduce arbuscular mycorrhizal fungal colonization in dominant plant species
    McKibben, Michael
    Henning, Jeremiah A.
    PEERJ, 2018, 6
  • [3] The effects of arbuscular mycorrhizal fungal species and taxonomic groups on stressed and unstressed plants: a global meta-analysis
    Marro, Nicolas
    Grilli, Gabriel
    Soteras, Florencia
    Caccia, Milena
    Longo, Silvana
    Cofre, Noelia
    Borda, Valentina
    Burni, Magali
    Janouskova, Martina
    Urcelay, Carlos
    NEW PHYTOLOGIST, 2022, 235 (01) : 320 - 332
  • [4] Conventional land-use intensification reduces species richness and increases production: A global meta-analysis
    Beckmann, Michael
    Gerstner, Katharina
    Akin-Fajiye, Morodoluwa
    Ceausu, Silvia
    Kambach, Stephan
    Kinlock, Nicole L.
    Phillips, Helen R. P.
    Verhagen, Willem
    Gurevitch, Jessica
    Klotz, Stefan
    Newbold, Tim
    Verburg, Peter H.
    Winter, Marten
    Seppelt, Ralf
    GLOBAL CHANGE BIOLOGY, 2019, 25 (06) : 1941 - 1956
  • [5] The Effects of Invasive Species on the Decline in Species Richness: A Global Meta-Analysis
    Mollot, G.
    Pantel, J. H.
    Romanuk, T. N.
    NETWORKS OF INVASION: A SYNTHESIS OF CONCEPTS, 2017, 56 : 61 - 84
  • [6] Intraspecific plant interaction affects arbuscular mycorrhizal fungal species richness
    Zhang, Qian
    Koide, Roger T.
    Liu, Junxiang
    Li, Zhenjian
    Sun, Zhenyuan
    Sun, Qixiang
    Yang, Haishui
    PLANT AND SOIL, 2022, 470 (1-2) : 141 - 152
  • [7] Tree species richness and the logging of natural forests: A meta-analysis
    Clark, Jason A.
    Covey, Kristofer R.
    FOREST ECOLOGY AND MANAGEMENT, 2012, 276 : 146 - 153
  • [8] PLANT SPECIES RICHNESS IN FRAGMENTED AGRICULTURAL LANDSCAPE - META-ANALYSIS
    Saran, E.
    Dusza-Zwolinska, E.
    Gamrat, R.
    APPLIED ECOLOGY AND ENVIRONMENTAL RESEARCH, 2019, 17 (01): : 53 - 83
  • [9] Sources of inocula influence mycorrhizal colonization of plants in restoration projects: a meta-analysis
    Maltz, Mia R.
    Treseder, Kathleen K.
    RESTORATION ECOLOGY, 2015, 23 (05) : 625 - 634
  • [10] Nitrogen addition drives changes in arbuscular mycorrhizal fungal richness through changes in plant species richness in revegetated alpine grassland
    Shi, Guoxi
    Zhang, Zhonghua
    Ma, Li
    Liu, Yongjun
    Wang, Yibo
    Uwamungu, Jean Yves
    Feng, Huyuan
    Dong, Shikui
    Yao, Buqing
    Zhou, Huakun
    FUNGAL ECOLOGY, 2024, 67