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Dryad

Data from: Plant-soil feedbacks mediate shrub expansion in declining forests, but only in the right light

Cite this dataset

Pfennigwerth, Alix A.; Van Nuland, Michael E.; Bailey, Joseph K.; Schweitzer, Jennifer A. (2018). Data from: Plant-soil feedbacks mediate shrub expansion in declining forests, but only in the right light [Dataset]. Dryad. https://doi.org/10.5061/dryad.c4g76

Abstract

1. Contemporary global change, including the widespread mortality of foundation tree species, is altering ecosystems and plant communities at unprecedented rates. Plant-soil interactions drive myriad community dynamics, and we hypothesized such interactions may be an important driver of succession following the loss of foundation tree species. 2. We examined whether plant-soil biota interactions, in the context of a putatively important light gradient associated with foundation tree decline, mediate the expansion of Rhododendron maximum in southeastern US forests where Tsuga canadensis (eastern hemlock), a dominant foundation tree species, is in decline. Using an 11-month, controlled inoculation experiment paired with Illumina sequencing, we tested the following hypotheses: (1) Relative to conspecific (R. maximum-conditioned) soils, R. maximum seedlings have higher performance in soils conditioned by T. canadensis and lower performance in interspace soils (conditioned by neither T. canadensis nor R. maximum) due to variation in soil fungal biota, and (2) seedling performance is greater in high light versus low light environments (matching environments under infested versus uninfested T. canadensis crowns, respectively). 3. In partial support of the first hypothesis, we found that R. maximum seedling performance was highest in T. canadensis-conditioned and R. maximum-conditioned soils and lowest in interspace soils. Mechanistically, soils conditioned by T. canadensis and R. maximum had more ericoid and ectomycorrhizal fungi, less saprotrophic fungi, and were less species-rich than interspace soils, and variation in these community traits predicted substantial variation in R. maximum seedling biomass. However, in support of our second hypothesis, soil effects on plant performance were evident in high light only; in low light, soil inoculation did not affect plant performance and plants performed worse. 4. Synthesis. Our findings suggest interactions with soil biota act synergistically with altered abiotic environments to mediate species responses to widespread foundation tree mortality, providing evidence for a novel mechanism of plant response to large-scale disturbance. Examining plant-soil interactions in the context of relevant abiotic gradients can therefore enhance our understanding, predictions, and management of community development processes following forest disturbance.

Usage notes

Funding

National Science Foundation, Award: DGE-1452154

Location

North Carolina
Southern Appalachian Mountains
Tennessee
Virginia