AI Article Synopsis

  • Understanding the interactions between aboveground and belowground components is crucial in ecology, especially for predicting responses to global change.
  • A field experiment tested the effects of a mutualistic leaf endophyte on American beachgrass under altered precipitation conditions, revealing complex interactions within microbial communities.
  • The study found that the presence of the endophyte increased root biomass but reduced the diversity of belowground fungi and bacteria, indicating that aboveground organisms can significantly influence belowground community dynamics and ecosystem processes.

Article Abstract

Understanding interactions between above- and belowground components of ecosystems is an important next step in community ecology. These interactions may be fundamental to predicting ecological responses to global change because indirect effects occurring through altered species interactions can outweigh or interact with the direct effects of environmental drivers. In a multiyear field experiment (2010-2015), we tested how experimental addition of a mutualistic leaf endophyte (Epichloë amarillans) associated with American beachgrass (Ammophila breviligulata) interacted with an altered precipitation regime (±30%) to affect the belowground microbial community. Epichloë addition increased host root biomass at the plot scale, but reduced the length of extraradical arbuscular mycorrhizal (AM) fungal hyphae in the soil. Under ambient precipitation alone, the addition of Epichloë increased root biomass per aboveground tiller and reduced the diversity of AM fungi in A. breviligulata roots. Furthermore, with Epichloë added, the diversity of root-associated bacteria declined with higher soil moisture, whereas in its absence, bacterial diversity increased with higher soil moisture. Thus, the aboveground fungal mutualist not only altered the abundance and composition of belowground microbial communities but also affected how belowground communities responded to climate, suggesting that aboveground microbes have potential for cascading influences on community dynamics and ecosystem processes that occur belowground.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5827620PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/femsec/fix036DOI Listing

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