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Research article - Peer-reviewed, 2021

The mycorrhizal tragedy of the commons

Henriksson, Nils; Franklin, Oskar; Tarvainen, Lasse; Marshall, John; Lundberg-Felten, Judith; Eilertsen, Lill; Naesolm, Torgny

Abstract

Trees receive growth-limiting nitrogen from their ectomycorrhizal symbionts, but supplying the fungi with carbon can also cause nitrogen immobilization, which hampers tree growth. We present results from field and greenhouse experiments combined with mathematical modelling, showing that these are not conflicting outcomes. Mycorrhizal networks connect multiple trees, and we modulated C provision by strangling subsets of Pinus sylvestris trees, assuming that carbon supply to fungi was reduced proportionally to the strangled fraction. We conclude that trees gain additional nitrogen at the expense of their neighbours by supplying more carbon to the fungi. But this additional carbon supply aggravates nitrogen limitation via immobilization of the shared fungal biomass. We illustrate the evolutionary underpinnings of this situation by drawing on the analogous tragedy of the commons, where the shared mycorrhizal network is the commons, and explain how rising atmospheric CO2 may lead to greater nitrogen immobilization in the future.

Keywords

Carbon; forest; immobilization; mycorrhiza; nitrogen; trade

Published in

Ecology Letters
2021, volume: 24, number: 6, pages: 1215-1224
Publisher: WILEY

Authors' information

Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences, Department of Forest Ecology and Management
Franklin, Oskar
International Institute for Applied Systems Analysis (IIASA)
Tarvainen, Lasse
University of Gothenburg
Marshall, John D (Marshall, John)
Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences, Department of Forest Ecology and Management
Lundberg-Felten, Judith
Umea University
Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences, Department of Forest Genetics and Plant Physiology
Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences, Department of Forest Genetics and Plant Physiology

UKÄ Subject classification

Ecology

Publication Identifiers

DOI: https://doi.org/10.1111/ele.13737

URI (permanent link to this page)

https://res.slu.se/id/publ/111314