Authors
R Arraiano-Castilho, MI Bidartondo, T Niskanen, I Brunner, S Zimmermann, B Senn-Irlet, B Frey, U Peintner, T Mrak, LM Suz
Publication date
2024/2/1
Journal
Fungal Ecology
Volume
67
Pages
101300
Publisher
Elsevier
Description
The European Alps are experiencing more than twice the increase in air temperature observed in the rest of the world. Thus, the treeline ecotone, and the unique habitats above it, offer a preview of drastic changes in plant and animal communities. However, our knowledge about climate change impacts on microbial diversity belowground is scarce. Here we investigate how upslope shift of the treeline ecotone, associated with changes in soil nutrient content, temperature and precipitation, will influence alpine ectomycorrhizal (EM) communities of Dryas octopetala, Bistorta vivipara and Salix herbacea across different habitat types in the Alps. We also assessed the degree of EM community taxonomic composition turnover in these habitats across three different climatic projections for 2040 and 2070. Our results indicate that the specialized EM fungal communities from snowbed habitats will be mostly negatively …
Scholar articles
R Arraiano-Castilho, MI Bidartondo, T Niskanen… - Fungal Ecology, 2024