Record ID No. |
6810 |
Author(s) |
Schäfer H.*, Dannoura M., Ataka M. and Osawa A. , 2019 |
Affiliation |
*Laboratory of Ecosystem Production and Dynamics, Graduate School of Global Environmental Studies, Kyoto University, Kyoto, 606-8502, Japan. |
Title |
Decomposition rate of extraradical hyphae of arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi decreases rapidly over time and varies by hyphal diameter and season. |
Source. Vol.(no):Page |
Soil Biology and Biochemistry. 136: 107533. |
Categories |
Arbuscular Mycorrhiza |
Subjects |
Anatomy,Histology |
Sub-subjects |
Angiospermic parasites |
Host |
Chamaecyparis obtusa |
Organism |
NA |
Country |
Japan |
Abstracts |
Understanding how extraradical mycorrhizal fungal hyphae (EMH) regulate the cycling and retention of plant-assimilated carbon (C) in forest soils requires estimation of the production, mortality, and decomposition of EMH. To do this, the use of mass-balance models in combination with hyphal in-growth mesh bags (“in-growth bags”) was proposed in recent studies. However, poor knowledge on the decomposition of field-grown EMH prevents confirmation of assumed EMH decomposition dynamics. In this study, we determined the decrease in hyphal length density of field-grown EMH of arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi (AM) over eight months in in-growth bags incubated in a warm-temperate Chamaecyparis obtusa forest, to study EMH decomposition under field conditions. We used exponential decay models to describe the changes in the decomposition rate of EMH over the incubation time, between EMH diameter classes, and between seasons. A rapid decrease of the decomposition rate of EMH within two months from 2.5 to 0.1 month−1 was estimated, corresponding to an increase in half-life from 0.3 to 7 months. Furthermore, significant differences in the initial maximum decomposition rate were estimated between fine (1.6 month−1; minimum half-life: 0.4 months) and coarse EMH (3.1 month−1; minimum half-life: 0.2 months) and between incubations during spring-summer (April and August; 2.7 month−1; minimum half-life: 0.3 months) and autumn-winter (October and February; 1.1 month−1; minimum half-life: 0.6 months). This large variability in the decomposition rates of EMH of AM fungi has to be considered in mass-balance models to estimate C fluxes between plants, soil, and the atmosphere. |