Abstracts |
Most organisms engage in beneficial interactions with other species; however,
little is known regarding how individuals balance the competing demands of multiple mutualisms.
Here we examine three-way interactions among a widespread grass, Schedonorus phoenix, a
protective fungal endophyte aboveground, Neotyphodium coenophialum, and nutritional symbionts
(arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi) belowground. In a greenhouse experiment, we manipulated the
presence/absence of both fungi and applied a fertilizer treatment to individual plants. Endophyte
presence in host plants strongly reduced mycorrhizal colonization of roots. Additionally, for
plants with the endophyte, the density of endophyte hyphae was negatively correlated with
mycorrhizal colonization, suggesting a novel role for endophyte abundance in the interaction
between the symbionts. Endophyte presence increased plant biomass, and there was a positive
correlation between endophyte hyphal density and plant biomass. The effects of mutualists were
asymmetric: mycorrhizal fungi treatments had no significant impact on the endophyte and
negligible effects on plant biomass. Fertilization affected all three species - increasing plant
biomass and endophyte density, but diminishing mycorrhizal colonization. Mechanisms driving
negative effects of endophytes on mycorrhizae may include inhibition via endophyte alkaloids,
altered nutritional requirements of the host plant, and/or temporal and spatial priority effects
in the interactions among plants and multiple symbionts. |