Which trees you plant decides which microbes colonize the soil beneath
Dai X, Bi B, Yin Q, Jia S, He C
Mycorrhizal Networks
Walk through any mixed hardwood forest and the invisible web beneath your feet is being sculpted by which trees form which fungal partnerships, meaning that replanting oaks versus maples in a degraded woodland isn't just a canopy choice, it rewires the entire underground community that cycles nutrients back to every plant there.
Trees form partnerships with two main types of underground fungi, and this study showed those partnerships ripple outward to shape all the other microbes living in the soil nearby. Bacteria responded most to soil acidity and to how dominant the AM-partnered trees were in an area, while soil fungi cared most about how densely those same trees were packed together. The big takeaway: the type and spacing of trees you plant determines who shows up underground, and those underground communities are what keep the whole forest fed.
Key Findings
AM-dominated plots had higher soil nutrient availability and lower elevation; ECM-dominated plots occupied nutrient-poor soils at higher elevation across the 25-hectare study area.
Soil pH was the primary driver of bacterial community turnover (beta-diversity), and AM tree dominance significantly increased microbial network complexity.
AM tree density was the strongest single predictor of fungal community composition, outweighing mycorrhizal tree abundance or diversity as predictors.
chevron_right Technical Summary
Researchers studying a mountain forest in China found that the type of fungal partnership trees form underground shapes soil bacteria and fungi in opposite ways: trees with AM fungi (which share nutrients broadly) boosted bacterial network complexity and made bacterial communities more deterministic, while fungi in the soil responded most strongly to how densely AM trees were packed nearby.
Abstract Preview
Original paper
Contrasting Responses of Soil Bacterial and Fungal Communities to the Spatial Structure of Mycorrhizal-Associated Trees in a Warm-Temperate Forest.
Mycorrhizal associations regulate soil microbial diversity through nutrient economy strategies. In warm-temperate montane forests, Arbuscular mycorrhizal (AM) and ectomycorrhizal (ECM) tree species...
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