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Avis, PG; Mueller, GM; Lussenhop, J. 2008. Ectomycorrhizal fungal communities in two North American oak forests respond to nitrogen addition. NEW PHYTOLOGIST. 179(2):472-483.
Address:
Avis, PG, Field Museum Nat Hist, Dept Bot, Chicago, IL 60605
How nitrogen (N) deposition impacts ectomycorrhizal (EM) fungal
communities has been little studied in deciduous forests or across
spatial scales. Here, it was tested whether N addition decreases
species richness and shifts species composition across spatial scales
in temperate deciduous oak forests.
Combined molecular (terminal restriction fragment length polymorphism
(T-RFLP), sequencing) and morphological approaches were used to measure
EM fungal operational taxon unit (OTU) richness, community structure
and composition at the spatial scale of the root, soil core and forest
during a 3-yr N fertilization experiment in Quercus-dominated forests
near Chicago, IL, USA.
In N treatments, significantly lower OTU richness at the largest but
not smaller spatial scales and a different community structure were
detected. The effects of N appeared to be immediate, not cumulative.
Ordination indicated the composition of EM fungal communities was
determined by forest site and N fertilization.
The EM fungi responded to a N increase that was low compared with other
fertilization studies, suggesting that moderate increases in N
deposition can affect EM fungal communities at larger spatial scales in
temperate deciduous ecosystems. While responses at large spatial scales
indicate that environmental factors can drive changes in these
communities, untangling the impacts of abiotic from biotic factors
remain limited by detection issues.
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