Contrasts Among Mycorrhizal Plant Guilds in Foliar Nitrogen Concentration and δ¹⁵N Along Productivity Gradients of a Boreal Forest
2010
Kranabetter, J. M. | MacKenzie, W. H.
The distribution of plant species in boreal forest understories is hypothesized to reflect mycorrhizal guilds and associated adaptations for organic nitrogen (N) acquisition. In this study of a natural edaphic gradient, where supply rates of inorganic N increase with site productivity, we noted a decline in understory ectomycorrhizal, ericoid, and arbutoid plant communities on productive sites, in contrast to a positive response by most arbuscular species. We then assessed the rate of change in foliar N concentration (Nconc) and abundance of ¹⁵N (δ¹⁵N) of select plants from these mycorrhizal guilds. Two arbuscular plant species (Rubus parviflorus and Viburnum edule) had the sharpest increases in foliar Nconc with enhanced supplies of NH₄ ⁺ and NO₃ ⁻, but with no differences in foliar δ¹⁵N. An ectomycorrhizal species, Abies lasiocarpa, and ericoid species, Vaccinium membranaceum, had parallel increases in both Nconc and δ¹⁵N with soil N supply. The foliar δ¹⁵N of two arbutoid plants (Orthilia secunda and Pyrola asarifolia) were as enriched as ectomycorrhizal sporocarps, likely indicating N transfer from mycorrhizal networks. The depletion of foliar δ¹⁵N by ectomycorrhizal and ericoid plants on poorer sites likely reflected a high degree of N retention and photosynthate demand by fungi, whereas arbuscular plants may have had a less significant δ¹⁵N response because of a more passive role by fungi in scavenging organic N. The results suggest differences in how mycorrhiza exploit diverse soil N supplies (recalcitrant and labile organic N, NH₄ ⁺, NO₃ ⁻, and parasitized N) could be an important factor in boreal plant community composition.
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