1. Functional composition of initial soil fungi explains the difference in mass loss of Phragmites australis litter in different habitat conditions across multiple coastal wetlands.
- Author
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Yunmei Ping, Xu Pan, Lijuan Cui, Wei Li, Yukun Hu, and Cornelissen, Johannes H. C.
- Subjects
COASTAL wetlands ,SOIL fungi ,PHRAGMITES australis ,SOIL composition ,FOREST litter ,HABITATS - Abstract
The differences inmass loss of leaf litter are primarily thought to be driven by microbial activity, especially by fungi. However, the existence of such differences across large spatial scales has not been well explored in field studies and the underlying mechanisms of difference are still unclear, especially for the role of different fungal guilds in driving different mass losses. We conducted a 1-year decomposition study within each of four coastalwetlands inChina to test the difference inmass loss across a large spatial scale (ranging from 26° N to 41° N in latitude). In each wetland, six sites including three composed of P. australis and three composed of another dominant plant species typically in coastal ecosystems were selected. We used P. australis leaf litter as the standard decomposition material, placing it into litter bags with mesh sizes 1mm and 4 mm, respectively. Final litter mass loss was examined approximately after 3, 9 and 12months. The differentmass loss was quantified using additionalmass loss at P. australis sites compared to that at another species sites. We found that themass loss of leaf litter of P. australis showed a clear difference across multiple coastal wetlands only at later stages of decomposition, which was independent of mesofauna (mesh size) contribution to decomposition. Furthermore, the observed difference in mass loss was primarily attributed to the dissimilarities in initial soil fungal community, particularly the symbiotrophic fungi, rather than the soil bacterial community. Our results provide empirical evidence of a large-scale difference in mass loss in litter decomposition and have linked the observed difference to different soil fungal guilds. These results indicate that symbiotrophic fungi might play a direct or indirect role in driving difference inmass loss, which contributes to a better understanding and invites in-depth further investigation on the underlying microbe-driven mechanisms of the difference. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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