Plant and fungal responses to elevated atmospheric CO2 in mycorrhizal seedlings of Betula pendula

Citation
H. Rouhier et Dj. Read, Plant and fungal responses to elevated atmospheric CO2 in mycorrhizal seedlings of Betula pendula, ENVIR EXP B, 42(3), 1999, pp. 231-241
Citations number
38
Categorie Soggetti
Plant Sciences
Journal title
ENVIRONMENTAL AND EXPERIMENTAL BOTANY
ISSN journal
00988472 → ACNP
Volume
42
Issue
3
Year of publication
1999
Pages
231 - 241
Database
ISI
SICI code
0098-8472(199912)42:3<231:PAFRTE>2.0.ZU;2-T
Abstract
The effects of elevated CO2 concentrations upon carbon allocation in mycorr hizal (M) and non-mycorrhizal (NM) birch (Betula pendula) seedlings were in vestigated. M plants, colonised by the fungus Paxillus involutus, and NM pl ants, were exposed for 3 months to ambient (350 mu l 1(-1)) or elevated (70 0 mu l 1(-1)) CO2 environments. The assimilation and distribution of carbon within the different compartments of the plant-substrate-fungal system wer e investigated using radioactive carbon as a tracer. In addition, the impac t of elevated CO2 upon extension growth of the ectomycorrhizal mycelium of the fungus was determined in transparent observation chambers. Yields of wh ole plants and of shoots were significantly decreased under elevated CO2 wh ether they were grown with or without their fungal symbionts. Neither the d ry mass production of roots of mycorrhizal plants, nor the amount of carbon allocated to shoots, roots and mycorrhizal tips were affected by elevated CO2. While the number of mycorrhizal root tips was decreased with CO2 enric hment, their relative importance in the total root system was unchanged. Th ere was a significant increase in the extent of development of the external mycelium under elevated CO2. A greater proportion of the radioactive carbo n was allocated to the soil compartment under elevated CO2. This increase, probably arising through increased rhizodeposition, was greater in NM than M plants. The responses are discussed in terms of nutrient availability in the growth media and the possible role of increased carbon allocation to my corrhizal mycelium in nature. (C) 1999 Elsevier Science B.V. All rights res erved.