摘要
Plant–soil feedback (PSF), regulated by both mycorrhizae and soil-borne pathogens, is a primary mechanism maintaining high tree species diversity in the tropics. But how warming actually affects PSF is not well understood. We conducted a field warming experiment to test PSF on seedling mortality of two tree species: a rhizobia-associated tree (Ormosia semicastrata, Fabaceae) suffering from host-specific soil-borne pathogens and an ectomycorrhizal fungi-associated tree (Cyclobalanopsis patelliormis, Fagaceae) with low susceptibility to soil-borne pathogens. Soil fungi from the warming versus control seedling plots were identified by molecular sequencing. Results showed that the elevated temperature lowered seedling mortality of O. semicastrata, but had no effect on C. patelliormis seedlings. This indicates that warming weakened the negative PSF on O. semicastrata, presumably due to the observed decrease of the relative abundance of plant-pathogenic fungi and increase of ectomycorrhizal fungi but did not affect the PSF on C. patelliormis. The differential warming effects on seedling mortality of species with different microbial associations affords an example showcasing how the change in soil-borne microbes in response to global warming would, in turn, through PSF, alter tropical tree species composition and diversity. This study helps shed mechanistic light on the debate of biodiversity change as driven by climate change.
| 源语言 | 英语 |
|---|---|
| 文章编号 | e3810 |
| 期刊 | Ecology |
| 卷 | 103 |
| 期 | 12 |
| DOI | |
| 出版状态 | 已出版 - 12月 2022 |
联合国可持续发展目标
此成果有助于实现下列可持续发展目标:
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可持续发展目标 13 气候行动
指纹
探究 'Warming shifts soil microbial communities and tropical tree seedling mortality' 的科研主题。它们共同构成独一无二的指纹。引用此
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