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Mycorrhizal fungi alleviate acidification‐induced phosphorus limitation: Evidence from a decade‐long field experiment of simulated acid deposition in a tropical forest in south China.

Authors :
Hu, Yuanliu
Chen, Ji
Hui, Dafeng
Wang, Ying‐Ping
Li, Jianling
Chen, Jingwen
Chen, Guoyin
Zhu, Yiren
Zhang, Leiyi
Zhang, Deqiang
Deng, Qi
Source :
Global Change Biology. Jun2022, Vol. 28 Issue 11, p3605-3619. 15p.
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

South China has been experiencing very high rate of acid deposition and severe soil acidification in recent decades, which has been proposed to exacerbate the regional ecosystem phosphorus (P) limitation. We conducted a 10‐year field experiment of simulated acid deposition to examine how acidification impacts seasonal changes of different soil P fractions in a tropical forest with highly acidic soils in south China. As expected, acid addition significantly increased occluded P pool but reduced the other more labile P pools in the dry season. In the wet season, however, acid addition did not change microbial P, soluble P and labile organic P pools. Acid addition significantly increased exchangeable Al3+ and Fe3+ and the activation of Fe oxides in both seasons. Different from the decline of microbial abundance in the dry season, acid addition increased ectomycorrhizal fungi and its ratio to arbuscular mycorrhiza fungi in the wet season, which significantly stimulated phosphomonoesterase activities and likely promoted the dissolution of occluded P. Our results suggest that, even in already highly acidic soils, the acidification‐induced P limitation could be alleviated by stimulating ectomycorrhizal fungi and phosphomonoesterase activities. The differential responses and microbial controls of seasonal soil P transformation revealed here should be implemented into ecosystem biogeochemical model for predicting plant productivity under future acid deposition scenarios. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
13541013
Volume :
28
Issue :
11
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Global Change Biology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
156658103
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1111/gcb.16135