EGU2020-6960
https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu2020-6960
EGU General Assembly 2020
© Author(s) 2022. This work is distributed under
the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License.

Active support of mistletoe to the host tree with carbon assimilation under source-limitation – results from a 13C labelling experiment

Ao Wang1,2, Andreas Rigling1,2, Marco Lehmann1, Matthias Saurer1, Arthur Gessler1,2, Zhong Du1,3, and Maihe Li1
Ao Wang et al.
  • 1Swiss Federal Institute for Forest, Snow and Landscape, Forest Dynamics, Birmensdorf, Switzerland (ao.wang@wsl.ch)
  • 2Institute of Terrestrial Ecosystems, ETH Zurich, Zurich, Switzerland
  • 3College of Land and Resources, China West Normal University, Nanchong, China

Pine Mistletoe (Viscum album ssp. austriacum) is a hemi-parasite shrub species, whose survival and development rely on water and mineral resources obtained through the xylem sap from the host tree. Mistletoe can produce photosynthates in its green organs on its own. On the other side, as they are connected to the phloem of the host tree, they may also be able to retrieve  carbon assimilates from their host and/or vice versa. However, the dynamics and the steering factors of this relationship remains unclear. We conducted 13C- labelling experiments with mature Scots pine (Pinus sylvestris) infected by mistletoes in a long-term (15 years) irrigation experiment in Switzerland (Pfynwald, Valais) to investigate the transport of carbon assimilates and nutrients between the host and the parasite under different soil moisture (600 mm vs 1200 mm of precipitation per year). Three irrigated and three control (natural xeric) pine trees infected by mistletoes were 13C labelled for 4 hours. During the 13C labelling of the trees, the following two experiments were carried out. 
    1) Wrapping experiment: 3-4 clusters of mistletoes on the labelled trees were wrapped with aluminium foil and enclosed in plastic bags to prevent mistletoe photosynthesis using 13C-enriched CO2 and to investigate a potential host-mistletoe carbon transfer.
    2) Girdling and removal experiment: The phloem of 12 host tree branches (6 control & 6 irrigated) infected by mistletoes was manually removed (ca. 2 cm in width, basipetally of the mistletoes) to stop the downward transport of photosynthates from the girdled branches. Additionally, host needles or mistletoes were removed from the girdled branches to investigate the respective contribution of photosynthesis by the host needles vs. mistletoes to the host branch carbon balance.
     In the wrapping experiment, wrapped and unwrapped mistletoe leaves and stems were harvested at 10 times points over 6 months. In the girdling and removal experiment, needles, twigs (i.e. xylem and phloem) and mistletoe leaves were harvested at 7 time points over 14 days. In both experiment, bulk organic matter of each tissue was analysed to trace the 13C signal.
     We found that there was no 13C signal in the wrapped mistletoe leaves, indicating that there was no C-transfer from the host to the mistletoes via the phloem sap. Mistletoe removal from girdled branches decreased 13C-labelled carbon assimilates in host xylem and phloem. Meanwhile, when needles were completely removed from the girdled branches, host xylem and phloem were still able to acquire 13C from the mistletoes. These results suggest that mistletoes can support the host with carbon resources, which might be especially important when the host is C resource limited.
Our study provides new insights into the relationship between the hemi-parasite and its host tree. Mistletoes may play a role as C source providers to support the host and maintain a symbiotic relationship to survive. 

How to cite: Wang, A., Rigling, A., Lehmann, M., Saurer, M., Gessler, A., Du, Z., and Li, M.: Active support of mistletoe to the host tree with carbon assimilation under source-limitation – results from a 13C labelling experiment, EGU General Assembly 2020, Online, 4–8 May 2020, EGU2020-6960, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu2020-6960, 2020.