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Ectomycorrhizal fungal succession coincides with shifts in organic nitrogen availability and canopy closure in post-wildfire jack pine forests
Authors:Stephen D LeDuc  Erik A Lilleskov  Thomas R Horton  David E Rothstein
Institution:1. Department of Forestry and the Ecology, Evolutionary Biology and Behavior Program, Michigan State University, 126 Natural Resources, East Lansing, MI, 48824, USA
4. US Environmental Protection Agency, Ariel Rios Bldg, 1200 Pennsylvania Ave., NW, 8623P, Washington, DC, 20460, USA
2. U.S. Department of Agriculture Forest Service, Forestry Sciences Laboratory, 410 MacInnes Dr., Houghton, MI, 49931, USA
3. Department of Environmental and Forest Biology, State University of New York–College of Environmental Science and Forestry, 1 Forestry Drive, Syracuse, NY, 13210, USA
Abstract:Successional changes in belowground ectomycorrhizal fungal (EMF) communities have been observed with increasing forest stand age; however, mechanisms behind this change remain unclear. It has been hypothesized that declines of inorganic nitrogen (N) and increases of organic N influence changes in EMF taxa over forest development. In a post-wildfire chronosequence of six jack pine (Pinus banksiana) stands ranging in age from 5 to 56 years, we investigated EMF community composition and compared shifts in taxa with detailed soluble inorganic and organic N data. Taxa were identified by internal transcribed spacer rDNA sequencing, and changes in community composition evaluated with non-metric multi-dimensional scaling (NMDS). Dissimilarities in the community data were tested for correlations with N variables. We observed a successional shift along NMDS axis 1 from such taxa as Suillus brevipes and Thelephora terrestris in sites age 5 and 11 to species of Cortinarius and Russula, among others, in the four older sites. This change was positively correlated with soluble organic N (SON) (r 2 = 0.902, P = 0.033) and free amino-acid N (r 2 = 0.945, P = 0.021), but not inorganic N. Overall, our results show a successional shift of EMF communities occurring between stand initiation and canopy closure without a change in species of the dominant plant–host, and associated with SON and free amino-acid N in soil. It is uncertain whether EMF taxa are responding to these organic N forms directly, affecting their availability, or are ultimately responding to changes in other site variables, such as belowground productivity.
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