Below-ground ectomycorrhizal community structure in a recently burned bishop pine forest

Citation
P. Grogan et al., Below-ground ectomycorrhizal community structure in a recently burned bishop pine forest, J ECOLOGY, 88(6), 2000, pp. 1051-1062
Citations number
47
Language
INGLESE
art.tipo
Article
Categorie Soggetti
Environment/Ecology
Journal title
JOURNAL OF ECOLOGY
ISSN journal
0022-0477 → ACNP
Volume
88
Issue
6
Year of publication
2000
Pages
1051 - 1062
Database
ISI
SICI code
0022-0477(200012)88:6<1051:BECSIA>2.0.ZU;2-Y
Abstract
1 The effects of wildfire ash on ectomycorrhizal (EM) associations were inv estigated by sampling bishop pine (Pinus muricata, D. Don) seedlings from c ontrol and ash-removed plots 1.5 years after a severe lire in a northern Ca lifornian P. muricata forest. The below-ground community composition of EM at the site was characterized using molecular techniques (PCR-RFLP and nucl eotide sequencing). 2 A total of 30 fungal taxa were observed, many of which differed in their distribution between treatment and control seedlings. However, most of the taxa that were distinctive to either treatment or control seedlings occurre d only once across the site, precluding statistical detection of potential ash effects on EM community composition. There were no significant effects of ash removal on plot-level mycorrhizal community richness or diversity, a nd there were no distinct treatment-related clusters in a principal compone nts analysis. 3 Analysis of the combined data indicated that numbers of fungal taxa per s eedling, numbers of successive root depth increments colonized by the same taxon, and distances to neighbouring seedlings colonized by the same taxon, were randomly distributed across the site for the majority of mycorrhizal fungi. These distributional patterns suggest that the post-fire mycorrhizal community structure on P. muricata arose primarily from successful coloniz ation by randomly distributed point-source fungal inocula within the upper mineral soil layer of the forest floor. 4 By comparison with pre-fire studies from similar P. muricata sites nearby , our data indicate that severe wildfire disturbance resulted in marked cha nges in mycorrhizal community composition, and a sharp increase in the rela tive biomass of ascomycetous fungi.