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Warming influences carbon and nitrogen assimilation between a widespread Ericaceous shrub and root-associated fungi. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • - High-latitude ecosystems are warming more quickly than other areas, affecting plants like the Ericaceous shrub Empetrum nigrum, which may benefit from this warming due to its interaction with root-associated fungi.
  • - In experiments, researchers found that warming reduced the carbon (C) allocated to fungi when the shrub used a simple form of nitrogen (N) but increased C allocation with a more complex N form, indicating a change in nutrient exchange dynamics.
  • - The study highlights the need to consider different forms of nitrogen sources when studying plant-fungi interactions under warming conditions, suggesting that simpler nitrogen sources may not accurately reflect the complexities of these relationships.

Article Abstract

High-latitude ecosystems are warming faster than other biomes and are often dominated by a ground layer of Ericaceous shrubs, which can respond positively to warming. The carbon-for-nitrogen (C-for-N) exchange between Ericaceous shrubs and root-associated fungi may underlie shrub responses to warming, but has been understudied. In a glasshouse setting, we examined the effects of warming on the C-for-N exchange between the Ericaceous shrub Empetrum nigrum ssp. hermaphroditum and its root-associated fungi. We applied different C and N isotope labels, including a simple organic N form (glycine) and a complex organic N form (moss litter) and quantified their assimilation into soil, plant biomass, and root fungal biomass pools. We found that warming lowered the amount of C partitioned to root-associated fungi per unit of glycine N assimilated by E. nigrum, but only in the short term. By contrast, warming increased the amount of C partitioned to root-associated fungi per unit of moss N assimilated by E. nigrum. Our study suggests that climate warming affects the short-term exchange of C and N between a widespread Ericaceous shrub and root-associated fungi. Furthermore, while most isotope tracing studies use labile N sources, we demonstrate that a ubiquitous recalcitrant N source may produce contrasting results.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/nph.19384DOI Listing

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