TY - JOUR
T1 - Belowground impacts of alpine woody encroachment are determined by plant traits, local climate, and soil conditions
AU - Collins, Courtney G.
AU - Spasojevic, Marko J.
AU - Alados, Concepción L.
AU - Aronson, Emma L.
AU - Benavides, Juan C.
AU - Cannone, Nicoletta
AU - Caviezel, Chatrina
AU - Grau, Oriol
AU - Guo, Hui
AU - Kudo, Gaku
AU - Kuhn, Nikolas J.
AU - Müllerová, Jana
AU - Phillips, Michala L.
AU - Pombubpa, Nuttapon
AU - Reverchon, Frédérique
AU - Shulman, Hannah B.
AU - Stajich, Jason E.
AU - Stokes, Alexia
AU - Weber, Sören E.
AU - Diez, Jeffrey M.
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2020 John Wiley & Sons Ltd
PY - 2020/12
Y1 - 2020/12
N2 - Global climate and land use change are causing woody plant encroachment in arctic, alpine, and arid/semi-arid ecosystems around the world, yet our understanding of the belowground impacts of this phenomenon is limited. We conducted a globally distributed field study of 13 alpine sites across four continents undergoing woody plant encroachment and sampled soils from both woody encroached and nearby herbaceous plant community types. We found that woody plant encroachment influenced soil microbial richness and community composition across sites based on multiple factors including woody plant traits, site level climate, and abiotic soil conditions. In particular, root symbiont type was a key determinant of belowground effects, as Nitrogen-fixing woody plants had higher soil fungal richness, while Ecto/Ericoid mycorrhizal species had higher soil bacterial richness and symbiont types had distinct soil microbial community composition. Woody plant leaf traits indirectly influenced soil microbes through their impact on soil abiotic conditions, primarily soil pH and C:N ratios. Finally, site-level climate affected the overall magnitude and direction of woody plant influence, as soil fungal and bacterial richness were either higher or lower in woody encroached versus herbaceous soils depending on mean annual temperature and precipitation. All together, these results document global impacts of woody plant encroachment on soil microbial communities, but highlight that multiple biotic and abiotic pathways must be considered to scale up globally from site- and species-level patterns. Considering both the aboveground and belowground effects of woody encroachment will be critical to predict future changes in alpine ecosystem structure and function and subsequent feedbacks to the global climate system.
AB - Global climate and land use change are causing woody plant encroachment in arctic, alpine, and arid/semi-arid ecosystems around the world, yet our understanding of the belowground impacts of this phenomenon is limited. We conducted a globally distributed field study of 13 alpine sites across four continents undergoing woody plant encroachment and sampled soils from both woody encroached and nearby herbaceous plant community types. We found that woody plant encroachment influenced soil microbial richness and community composition across sites based on multiple factors including woody plant traits, site level climate, and abiotic soil conditions. In particular, root symbiont type was a key determinant of belowground effects, as Nitrogen-fixing woody plants had higher soil fungal richness, while Ecto/Ericoid mycorrhizal species had higher soil bacterial richness and symbiont types had distinct soil microbial community composition. Woody plant leaf traits indirectly influenced soil microbes through their impact on soil abiotic conditions, primarily soil pH and C:N ratios. Finally, site-level climate affected the overall magnitude and direction of woody plant influence, as soil fungal and bacterial richness were either higher or lower in woody encroached versus herbaceous soils depending on mean annual temperature and precipitation. All together, these results document global impacts of woody plant encroachment on soil microbial communities, but highlight that multiple biotic and abiotic pathways must be considered to scale up globally from site- and species-level patterns. Considering both the aboveground and belowground effects of woody encroachment will be critical to predict future changes in alpine ecosystem structure and function and subsequent feedbacks to the global climate system.
KW - alpine
KW - global change
KW - leaf traits
KW - plant–soil interactions
KW - soil microbes
KW - woody encroachment
UR - http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/gcb.15340
U2 - 10.1111/gcb.15340
DO - 10.1111/gcb.15340
M3 - Article
C2 - 32902066
AN - SCOPUS:85092158953
SN - 1354-1013
VL - 26
SP - 7112
EP - 7127
JO - Global Change Biology
JF - Global Change Biology
IS - 12
ER -