Arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi (AMF) form spatially complex communities in terrestrial ecosystems with known consequences for plant community structure and soil processes. It has previously been demonstrated that AMF community subsets differentially associate with host plants in a given community, but factors driving these relationships remain unclear. Here we examine potential influences on AMF community assembly in plant roots. Our first experiment involved alteration of nutrients (N and P) to two plant species, Centaurea stoebe (spotted knapweed) and Fescue idahoensis (
Results/Conclusions
Results for our first experiment indicate significant changes in root inhabiting AMF communities associated with F. idahoensis with altered nutrient availability, but not for C. stoebe. At low nutrient concentrations, AMF communities associated with the two plant species were not significantly different. This result suggests that when nutrient availability is low the potential for AMF-facilitated interaction between the two plant species may be greatest.
Results for the second experiment indicate that all four AMF genera used as inoculants were not only maintained in the presence of whole soil inoculum but had spread throughout the root system of each plant. Results of this experiment indicate that the identity of AMF species to which L. vulgare seedlings are initially exposed strongly influenced AMF community composition of the plants as they mature.