Environment and host as large-scale controls of ectomycorrhizal fungi

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

  • Sietse Van Der Linde
  • Laura M. Suz
  • C. David L. Orme
  • Filipa Cox
  • Henning Andreae
  • Endla Asi
  • Bonnie Atkinson
  • Sue Benham
  • Christopher Carroll
  • Nathalie Cools
  • Bruno De Vos
  • Hans Peter Dietrich
  • Johannes Eichhorn
  • Joachim Gehrmann
  • Tine Grebenc
  • Hyun S. Gweon
  • Karin Hansen
  • Frank Jacob
  • Ferdinand Kristöfel
  • Paweł Lech
  • Miklós Manninger
  • Henning Meesenburg
  • Päivi Merilä
  • Manuel Nicolas
  • Pavel Pavlenda
  • Pasi Rautio
  • Marcus Schaub
  • Hans Werner Schröck
  • Walter Seidling
  • Vít Šrámek
  • Anne Thimonier
  • Hugues Titeux
  • Elena Vanguelova
  • Arne Verstraeten
  • Peter Waldner
  • Sture Wijk
  • Yuxin Zhang
  • Daniel Žlindra
  • Martin I. Bidartondo

Explaining the large-scale diversity of soil organisms that drive biogeochemical processes - and their responses to environmental change - is critical. However, identifying consistent drivers of belowground diversity and abundance for some soil organisms at large spatial scales remains problematic. Here we investigate a major guild, the ectomycorrhizal fungi, across European forests at a spatial scale and resolution that is - to our knowledge - unprecedented, to explore key biotic and abiotic predictors of ectomycorrhizal diversity and to identify dominant responses and thresholds for change across complex environmental gradients. We show the effect of 38 host, environment, climate and geographical variables on ectomycorrhizal diversity, and define thresholds of community change for key variables. We quantify host specificity and reveal plasticity in functional traits involved in soil foraging across gradients. We conclude that environmental and host factors explain most of the variation in ectomycorrhizal diversity, that the environmental thresholds used as major ecosystem assessment tools need adjustment and that the importance of belowground specificity and plasticity has previously been underappreciated.

Original languageEnglish
JournalNature
Volume558
Issue number7709
Pages (from-to)243-248
Number of pages6
ISSN0028-0836
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2018

ID: 199913848