EGU24-1765, updated on 08 Mar 2024
https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu24-1765
EGU General Assembly 2024
© Author(s) 2024. This work is distributed under
the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License.

Forest microbiomes and aboveground forest functioning 

Mark Alan Anthony1 and the ICP Forests Microbiome Collaboration*
Mark Alan Anthony and the ICP Forests Microbiome Collaboration
  • 1Center for Microbiology and Environmental Systems Science, University of Vienna, Vienna, Austria (manthony5955@gmail.com)
  • *A full list of authors appears at the end of the abstract

Forest soils and roots harbor hyper-diverse microbiomes which strongly shape the growth and development of plant communities. How the biodiversity and functional capacities of the microbiome influence emergent ecosystem functioning is an important next frontier in the biogeosciences with implications for conservation, ecosystem management, and microbiome engineering. Directly testing hypotheses between microbiome diversity and forest functioning has been obstructed by a lack of paired data on microbiomes and in situ observations of forest growth and health. Here, I will synthesize findings from two large-scale European forest soil and root sampling efforts where we identified features of the mycorrhizal fungal, soil fungal, and bacterial communities linked to variation in forest tree growth and nutrition. We sampled roots and/or soils across 285 forest monitoring plots spanning 18 European countries, sequenced full-length fungal ITS and prokaryotic 16S amplicons to relate microbiomes to high resolution observations of tree growth, foliar nitrogen and phosphorus content, and aboveground carbon stocks. We show that the composition, richness, and traits of both root and soil inhabiting symbiotrophic fungal guilds is tightly linked to variation in tree growth, nutrition, and aboveground biomass carbon stocks while the biodiversity of free-living microbiomes was not tightly coupled to these key metrics of aboveground forest functioning. We also produced a roster of fungal biodiversity and compositional traits which are strong positive and negative bioindicators of forest carbon storage and nutrition. These large-scale observations lay important groundwork for experimental studies and demonstrate that soil microbiomes capture unique variation in emergent forest functions that cannot be explained by other physical, chemical, and biological properties.

ICP Forests Microbiome Collaboration:

Leho Tedersoo, Bruno De Vos, Luc Croisé, Henning Meesenburg, Markus Wagner, Henning Andreae, Frank Jacob, Paweł Lech, Anna Kowalska, Martin Greve, Genoveva Popova, Beat Frey, Arthur Gessler, Marcus Schaub, Marco Ferretti, Peter Waldner, Vicent Calatayud, Roberto Canullo, Giancarlo Papitto, Aleksander Marinšek, Morten Ingerslev, Lars Vesterdal, Pasi Rautio, Helge Meissner, Volkmar Timmermann, Mike Dettwiler, Nadine Eickenscheidt, Andreas Schmitz, Nina van Tiel, Sietse van der Linde, Laura M. Suz, Martin Bidartondo, Filipa Cox, Colin Averill

How to cite: Anthony, M. A. and the ICP Forests Microbiome Collaboration: Forest microbiomes and aboveground forest functioning , EGU General Assembly 2024, Vienna, Austria, 14–19 Apr 2024, EGU24-1765, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu24-1765, 2024.