Abstract

Nonnative Bromus tectorum (cheatgrass) is decimating sagebrush steppe, one of the largest ecosystems in the Western United States, and is causing regional-scale shifts in the predominant plant-fungal interactions. Sagebrush, a native perennial, hosts arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi (AMF), whereas cheatgrass, a winter annual, is a relatively poor host of AMF. This shift is likely intertwined with decreased carbon (C)-sequestration in cheatgrass-invaded soils and alterations in overall soil fungal community composition and structure, but the latter remain unresolved. We examined soil fungal communities using high throughput amplicon sequencing (ribosomal large subunit gene) in the 0–4 cm and 4–8 cm depth intervals of six cores from cheatgrass- and six cores from sagebrush-dominated soils. Sagebrush core surfaces (0–4 cm) contained higher nitrogen and total C than cheatgrass core surfaces; these differences mirrored the presence of glomalin related soil proteins (GRSP), which has been associated with AMF activity and increased C-sequestration. Fungal richness was not significantly affected by vegetation type, depth or an interaction of the two factors. However, the relative abundance of seven taxonomic orders was significantly affected by vegetation type or the interaction between vegetation type and depth. Teloschistales, Spizellomycetales, Pezizales and Cantharellales were more abundant in sagebrush libraries and contain mycorrhizal, lichenized and basal lineages of fungi. Only two orders (Coniochaetales and Sordariales), which contain numerous economically important pathogens and opportunistic saprotrophs, were more abundant in cheatgrass libraries. Pleosporales, Agaricales, Helotiales and Hypocreales were most abundant across all libraries, but the number of genera detected within these orders was as much as 29 times lower in cheatgrass relative to sagebrush libraries. These compositional differences between fungal communities associated with cheatgrass- and sagebrush-dominated soils warrant future research to examine soil fungal community composition across more sites and time points as well as in association with native grass species that also occupy cheatgrass- invaded ecosystems.

Highlights

  • Nonnative Bromus tectorum is rapidly invading and decimating sagebrush steppe (Artemisia tridentata and its congenerics), one of the most extensive ecosystem types in the Western U.S [1]

  • Two subsamples of the homogenized fractions were transferred to sterile, 50-mL disposable conical centrifuge tubes that were flash-frozen in liquid N2; these samples were transported to the laboratory on dry ice where they were stored at -80°C until they were utilized for DNA extraction and glomalin-related soil protein (GRSP) analyses

  • As the first in-depth sequencing analysis of soil fungal communities in cheatgrass-invaded sagebrush steppe, this study provides a foundation upon which hypotheses can be built regarding mechanisms driving fungal community shifts in this ecosystem

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Summary

Introduction

Nonnative Bromus tectorum (cheatgrass) is rapidly invading and decimating sagebrush steppe (Artemisia tridentata and its congenerics), one of the most extensive ecosystem types in the Western U.S [1]. Previous studies have demonstrated that cheatgrass invasion of aridland ecosystems can alter soil microbial community composition and structure as well as rates of microbially-mediated nutrient cycling processes [1,5, 11,12,13,14,15]. Previous studies of cheatgrass invasion have lacked sufficient taxonomic resolution to determine which specific fungal taxa may be most susceptible to changes in relative abundance; in addition, they have not addressed vertical patterns in soil fungal community composition. Neither fungal richness nor biomass varied statistically among the four soil fractions, the relative abundance of the fungal orders differed significantly between the sagebrush and cheatgrass-dominated soils This first in-depth study of fungal taxonomic shifts in cheatgrass-invaded, sagebrush steppe soils, suggests that functional shifts towards saprotroph-dominated fungal communities may be occurring

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