Climate drives the spatial distribution of mycorrhizal host plants in terrestrial ecosystems

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Abstract

Mycorrhizal associations have massive impacts on ecosystem functioning, but the mode and magnitude heavily depend on the mycorrhizal type involved. Different types of mycorrhizas are recognized to predominate under different environmental conditions. However, the respective importance of climate and soil characteristics in shaping mycorrhizal global distributions are still poorly understood. We provide a quantitative and comprehensive global analysis of the main climatic and edaphic predictors of the distribution of plants featuring different mycorrhizal types. Estimates on per grid-cell relative above-ground biomass of plants holding arbuscular mycorrhiza (AM), ectomycorrhiza (EcM) and ericoid mycorrhiza (ErM) association were related to a set of 39 climatic and edaphic variables. We assessed their relationship by applying a Generalized Additive Models for Location, Scale and Shape (GAMLSS). The best GAMLSS models were able to explain 55%, 41% and 46% of the variance in AM, EcM and ErM distribution, respectively. Temperature-related factors were the main predictors of distribution patterns for the three different mycorrhizal plant types. AM plants are favoured by warm climates, while EcM plants’ dominance (and to some extent ErM plants too) is favoured by colder climates. Synthesis. The observed lack of importance of soil drivers challenges the predominant view that mycorrhizal plants distribution mainly reflects soil type preferences—as related to its nutrient foraging strategies—of the different mycorrhizal types. Instead, our results highlight climate—and particularly temperature—as the main force shaping the distribution of arbuscular mycorrhiza, ectomycorrhiza and ericoid mycorrhiza host plants at the global scale and suggest that climate change can significantly alter the distribution of mycorrhizal host plants, with a subsequent impact on ecosystem functioning.

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Barceló, M., van Bodegom, P. M., & Soudzilovskaia, N. A. (2019). Climate drives the spatial distribution of mycorrhizal host plants in terrestrial ecosystems. Journal of Ecology, 107(6), 2564–2573. https://doi.org/10.1111/1365-2745.13275

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