This is a Preprint and has not been peer reviewed. This is version 1 of this Preprint.
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Abstract
Mutualistic interactions between plants and soil fungi, mycorrhizae, control carbon and nutrient fluxes in terrestrial ecosystems. Soil of ecosystems featuring a particular type of mycorrhiza exhibit specific properties across multiple dimensions of soil functioning. The knowledge about the impacts of mycorrhizal fungi on soil functioning accumulated so far, indicates that these impacts are of major importance, yet poorly conceptualized. We propose a concept of mycorrhizal fungal environments in soil. Within this concept, we discuss knowledge gaps related to understanding and quantification of mycorrhizal fungal impacts. We propose an experimental framework to address these gaps in a quantitative manner, and present the field experiment “Mycotron”, where we established vegetation series featuring three mycorrhizal types - Ericoid (ERM), Ecto- (ECM) and Arbuscular mycorrhiza (AM), to quantitatively assess mycorrhizal fungal impacts on soil functioning. The experimental treatments entail manipulations in dominance level of vegetation of three pure mycorrhizal types (AM, ECM, ERM) in standardized soil conditions. This experiment constitutes a unique testbed to quantitatively assess the impacts of distinct mycorrhizal fungal environments on a large variety of ecosystem functions. Our approach aids the quantification of microbiota and plant-microbial interaction impacts on soil biochemical cycles.
DOI
https://doi.org/10.32942/X2501J
Subjects
Life Sciences
Keywords
Mycotron experiment, Soil properties, soil biochemical cycles, arbuscular mycorrhiza, ectomycorrhiza, ericoid mycorrhiza, 18 ectomycorrhiza, Soil properties, soil biochemical cycles, arbuscular mycorrhiza, ectomycorrhiza, ericoid mycorrhiza
Dates
Published: 2023-05-11 15:14
Last Updated: 2023-05-11 19:14
License
CC-By Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International
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Language:
English
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