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Carbon sequestration and community composition of ectomycorrhizal fungi across a geothermal warming gradient in an Icelandic spruce forest
Affiliation:1. MEMEG, Department of Biology, Lund University, 223 62, Lund, Sweden;2. Center for Environmental and Climate Research, Lund University, 223 62, Lund, Sweden;3. Icelandic Forest Research, Mógilsá, 116 Reykjavik, Iceland;4. Agricultural University of Iceland, Hvanneyri, 311 Borgarnes, Iceland
Abstract:Soil warming (0–5.5 °C above controls) effects on ectomycorrhizal growth, carbon sequestration and community composition were examined in a Picea sitchensis forest spanning a geothermal gradient in Iceland. Fungal communities were assayed with sand-filled ingrowth meshbags incubated in the soil for 5 months. Meshbags amended with compost made from maize leaves (a C4 plant enriched in 13C) were incubated for 5 or 12 months and used to estimate C sequestration by the fungal community. Despite increases in tree growth, moderate warming only slightly reduced or had no effect on mycelial growth and had no effect on fungal carbon sequestration or overall ectomycorrhizal community composition. Warming was associated with increased abundance of ascomycetes, particularly pyronemataceous ectomycorrhizal fungi, and altered saprotrophic community composition. Increased nitrate availability and root turnover may explain the lack of a positive ectomycorrhizal growth response to increased tree growth and observed shifts in community composition with warming.
Keywords:Ectomycorrhiza  Climate change  Soil warming  Carbon sequestration  Pyronemataceae
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