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Arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi may mitigate the influence of a joint rise of temperature and atmospheric <tex>CO_{2}$</tex> on soil respiration in grasslands

Authors :
Vicca, Sara
Zavalloni, Costanza
Fu , Yongshuo H
Voets, L
Dupré de Boulois, Hervé
Declerck, Stephan
Ceulemans, R.
Nijs, I.
Janssens, I.A.
UCL - Autre
Source :
International journal of ecology, International Journal of Ecology, Vol 2009 (2009), International Journal of Ecology, Vol. 2009, p. ID 209768 (2009)
Publication Year :
2009

Abstract

We investigated the effects of mycorrhizal colonization and future climate on roots and soil respiration (Rsoil) in model grassland ecosystems. We exposed artificial grassland communities on pasteurized soil (no living arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi (AMF) present) and on pasteurized soil subsequently inoculated with AMF to ambient conditions and to a combination of elevated CO2 and temperature (future climate scenario). After one growing season, the inoculated soil revealed a positive climate effect on AMF root colonization and this elicited a significant AMF x climate scenario interaction on root biomass. Whereas the future climate scenario tended to increase root biomass in the noninoculated soil, the inoculated soil revealed a 30% reduction of root biomass under warming at elevated CO2 (albeit not significant). This resulted in a diminished response of Rsoil to simulated climatic change, suggesting that AMF may contribute to an attenuated stimulation of Rsoil in a warmer, high CO2 world.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
16879708
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
International journal of ecology
Accession number :
edsair.dedup.wf.001..32d84d6e7a1348ff216a1dce7e72557f