评估在温带半干旱草原驱动仙女环模式的土壤微生物。

Jiahuan Li, Lizhu Guo, Gail W T Wilson, Adam B Cobb, Kun Wang, Li Liu, Huan Zhao, Ding Huang
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摘要

背景:仙女环出现在全球不同的生物群系中;然而,关于草地生态系统仙女环的驱动因素,存在一个关键的知识缺口。草地仙环的特点是地下菌丝前缘扩大,地上是旺盛的植被环,每个生长季节都集中发育。我们在半干旱草原上进行了一项实地研究,评估了仙女环动力学,以阐明驱动不同植被模式的地上和地下相互作用。在最初的实地调查之后,我们进行了一个互补的温室实验,使用从特定的仙女环区(内部,边缘,外部)收集的土壤来检查受控条件下植物-土壤-微生物的相互作用。以优势禾草羊草(Leymus chinensis)为研究对象,探讨了不同菌环微生物群落对植物生长和营养的影响。结果:在我们的野外研究中,与环内或相邻(外)对照植物相比,环缘植物在氮和磷浓度较高的情况下产生了更大的茎部生物量。土壤微生物群落生物标志物表明,随着仙女环的扩大,相对微生物生物量发生了变化。与环外或环缘相比,环内植物根系受到病原菌的伤害更大。温室试验证实,接种活缘土总体上促进了植株生长,但降低了植株茎部磷浓度。用环内收集的土壤接种增加了根病原体侵染,减少了地上部生物量。结论:环缘土壤微生物活动通过调动植物速效磷或定向刺激促进植物生长。然而,随着环的扩大,边缘的羊草可能会增加病原体的积累,导致环中心的生长在随后的生长季节中下降。我们的研究结果为草原仙女环的植物-土壤-微生物动力学提供了新的见解,有助于阐明这些神秘的植被模式。
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Assessing soil microbes that drive fairy ring patterns in temperate semiarid grasslands.

Background: Fairy rings occur in diverse global biomes; however, there is a critical knowledge gap regarding drivers of fairy rings in grassland ecosystems. Grassland fairy rings are characterized belowground by an expanding mycelial front and aboveground by vigorous vegetation rings that develop concentrically with each growing season. We evaluated fairy ring dynamics in a field study conducted in semiarid grasslands to elucidate above- and belowground interactions driving distinct vegetation patterns. We followed this initial field investigation with a complementary greenhouse experiment, using soils collected from specific fairy ring zones (inside, ring-edge, outside) to examine plant-soil-microbial interactions under controlled conditions. We selected Leymus chinensis (a dominant grass) as our model plant species to assess the role of diverse fairy ring microbial communities on plant growth and nutrition.

Results: In our field study, plants on the ring-edge produced greater shoot biomass with higher concentrations of N and P, compared to plants inside the ring or adjacent (outside) controls. Soil microbial community biomarkers indicate shifts in relative microbial biomass as fairy rings expand. Inside the ring, plant roots showed greater damage from pathogenic fungi, compared to outside or ring-edge. Our greenhouse experiment confirmed that inoculation with live ring-edge soil generally promoted plant growth but decreased shoot P concentration. Inoculation with soil collected from inside the ring increased root pathogen infection and reduced shoot biomass.

Conclusion: We propose that soil microbial activity within ring-edges promotes plant growth via mobilization of plant-available P or directed stimulation. However, as the ring expands, L. chinensis at the leading edge may increase pathogen accumulation, resulting in reduced growth at the center of the ring in subsequent growing seasons. Our results provide new insights into the plant-soil-microbial dynamics of fairy rings in grasslands, helping to elucidate these mysterious vegetation patterns.

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