AI Article Synopsis

  • Organic carbon is essential for energy transfer in aquatic systems and fungi play a key role in breaking down woody tissue within this carbon cycle.
  • High-resolution infrared micro-spectroscopy reveals that aquatic fungi actively decompose lignin and cellulose in leaf material from River Redgum trees, indicating a close interaction between fungi and their substrate.
  • The study suggests that fungi partition lignified materials into biodegradable components that recycle into the carbon cycle, and resistant materials that contribute to carbon storage in sediments or dissolved organic carbon in water.

Article Abstract

Organic carbon is a critical component of aquatic systems, providing energy storage and transfer between organisms. Fungi are a major decomposer group in the aquatic carbon cycle, and are one of few groups thought to be capable of breaking down woody (lignified) tissue. In this work we have used high spatial resolution (synchrotron light source) infrared micro-spectroscopy to study the interaction between aquatic fungi and lignified leaf vein material (xylem) from River Redgum trees (E. camaldulensis) endemic to the lowland rivers of South-Eastern Australia. The work provides spatially explicit evidence that fungal colonisation of leaf litter involves the oxidative breakdown of lignin immediately adjacent to the fungal tissue and depletion of the lignin-bound cellulose. Cellulose depletion occurs over relatively short length scales (5-15 µm) and highlights the likely importance of mechanical breakdown in accessing the carbohydrate content of this resource. Low bioavailability compounds (oxidized lignin and polyphenols of plant origin) remain in colonised leaves, even after fungal activity diminishes, and suggests a possible pathway for the sequestration of carbon in wetlands. The work shows that fungi likely have a critical role in the partitioning of lignified material into a biodegradable fraction that can re-enter the aquatic carbon cycle, and a recalcitrant fraction that enters long-term storage in sediments or contribute to the formation of dissolved organic carbon in the water column.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3618115PMC
http://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0060857PLOS

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

high spatial
8
spatial resolution
8
infrared micro-spectroscopy
8
aquatic fungi
8
organic carbon
8
aquatic carbon
8
carbon cycle
8
aquatic
5
carbon
5
resolution infrared
4

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!