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Tree growth of Mycorrhizal Types Responds Differently to Soil Nutrients and Neighborhood Crowding

Dec 21, 2021

Tree growth is an important part of forest dynamics, the symbiosis between trees and mycorrhizal fungi (e.g., arbuscular mycorrhizal (AM), ectomycorrhizal (EM) and dual-mycorrhizal (AEM)) can improve species ability to absorb nutrients and adapt to the local environment, which ultimately results in the difference of species response to biotic and abiotic factors. However, it remains unclear how species with different mycorrhizal associations exhibit growth responses to local abiotic and biotic gradients. 

In view of this, Prof. HAO Zhanqing and Dr. REN Jing from the Institute of Applied Ecology of the Chinese Academy of Sciences (CAS), in cooperation with Prof. Claire Fortunel from the Institute de Recherche pour le Développement, used a continuous 10-year tree growth data recording by the dendrometer band of 25 tree species in Changbaishan Forest Dynamics Plot to explore differences in tree growth response to soil nutrients and neighborhood crowding between tree species associating with AM, EM, and AEM fungi.

They found that soil nutrients decreased AM tree growth, while competition reduced both AM and EM tree growth, and neither soil nor competition impacted AEM tree growth.

Although individual-level traits (e.g., leaf area) were stronger predictors of tree growth than species-level traits across mycorrhizal types, most traits can hardly capture differences in tree growth response to soil nutrients and competition. 

These findings highlight the importance of integrating information on tree mycorrhizal associations and individual-level traits to improve our understanding of the drivers of tree growth and forest dynamics. 

This study was supported by the National Natural Science Foundation of China and the Strategic Priority Research Program of CAS.

Contact

YUE Qian

Institute of Applied Ecology

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Tree growth response to soil nutrients and neighborhood crowding varies between mycorrhizal types in an old-growth temperate forest

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