Literature DB >> 19878460

Architecture of the wood-wide web: Rhizopogon spp. genets link multiple Douglas-fir cohorts.

Kevin J Beiler1, Daniel M Durall, Suzanne W Simard, Sheri A Maxwell, Annette M Kretzer.   

Abstract

*The role of mycorrhizal networks in forest dynamics is poorly understood because of the elusiveness of their spatial structure. We mapped the belowground distribution of the fungi Rhizopogon vesiculosus and Rhizopogon vinicolor and interior Douglas-fir trees (Pseudotsuga menziesii var. glauca) to determine the architecture of a mycorrhizal network in a multi-aged old-growth forest. *Rhizopogon spp. mycorrhizas were collected within a 30 x 30 m plot. Trees and fungal genets were identified using multi-locus microsatellite DNA analysis. Tree genotypes from mycorrhizas were matched to reference trees aboveground. Two trees were considered linked if they shared the same fungal genet(s). *The two Rhizopogon species each formed 13-14 genets, each colonizing up to 19 trees in the plot. Rhizopogon vesiculosus genets were larger, occurred at greater depths, and linked more trees than genets of R. vinicolor. Multiple tree cohorts were linked, with young saplings established within the mycorrhizal network of Douglas-fir veterans. A strong positive relationship was found between tree size and connectivity, resulting in a scale-free network architecture with small-world properties. *This mycorrhizal network architecture suggests an efficient and robust network, where large trees play a foundational role in facilitating conspecific regeneration and stabilizing the ecosystem.

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Year:  2009        PMID: 19878460     DOI: 10.1111/j.1469-8137.2009.03069.x

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  New Phytol        ISSN: 0028-646X            Impact factor:   10.151


  21 in total

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4.  The continuing relevance of "older" mycorrhiza literature: insights from the work of John Laker Harley (1911-1990).

Authors:  Roger T Koide; Christopher W Fernandez
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7.  Dominance of a Rhizopogon sister species corresponds to forest age structure.

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Review 8.  Symbiosis and stress: how plant microbiomes affect host evolution.

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9.  Spatial patterns of ectomycorrhizal assemblages in a monospecific forest in relation to host tree genotype.

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10.  Community composition of root-associated fungi in a Quercus-dominated temperate forest: "codominance" of mycorrhizal and root-endophytic fungi.

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