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Exploiting mycorrhizas in broad daylight: Partial mycoheterotrophy is a common nutritional strategy in meadow orchids
Author(s) -
Schiebold Julienne M.I.,
Bidartondo Martin I.,
Lenhard Florian,
Makiola Andreas,
Gebauer Gerhard
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
journal of ecology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.452
H-Index - 181
eISSN - 1365-2745
pISSN - 0022-0477
DOI - 10.1111/1365-2745.12831
Subject(s) - biology , botany , decomposer , orchidaceae , ecology , ecosystem
Partial mycoheterotrophy ( PMH ) is a nutritional mode in which plants utilize organic matter, i.e. carbon, both from photosynthesis and a fungal source. The latter reverses the direction of plant‐to‐fungus carbon flow as usually assumed in mycorrhizal mutualisms. Based on significant enrichment in the heavy isotope 13 C, a growing number of PMH orchid species have been identified. These PMH orchids are mostly associated with fungi simultaneously forming ectomycorrhizas with forest trees. In contrast, the much more common orchids that associate with rhizoctonia fungi, which are decomposers, have stable isotope profiles most often characterized by high 15 N enrichment and high nitrogen concentrations but either an insignificant 13 C enrichment or depletion relative to autotrophic plants. Using hydrogen stable isotope abundances recent investigations showed PMH in rhizoctonia‐associated orchids growing under light‐limited conditions. Hydrogen isotope abundances can be used as substitute for carbon isotope abundances in cases where autotrophic and heterotrophic carbon sources are insufficiently distinctive to indicate PMH . To determine whether rhizoctonia‐associated orchids growing in habitats with high irradiance feature PMH as a nutritional mode, we sampled 13 orchid species growing in montane meadows, four forest orchid species and 34 autotrophic reference species. We analysed δ 2 H, δ 13 C, δ 15 N and δ 18 O and determined nitrogen concentrations. Orchid mycorrhizal fungi were identified by DNA sequencing. As expected, we found high enrichments in 2 H, 13 C, 15 N and nitrogen concentrations in the ectomycorrhiza‐associated forest orchids, and the rhizoctonia‐associated Neottia cordata from a forest site was identified as PMH . Most orchids inhabiting sunny meadows lacked 13 C enrichment or were even significantly depleted in 13 C relative to autotrophic references. However, we infer PMH for the majority of these meadow orchids due to both significant 2 H and 15 N enrichment and high nitrogen concentrations. Pseudorchis albida was the sole autotrophic orchid in this study as it exhibited neither enrichment in any isotope nor a distinctive leaf nitrogen concentration. Synthesis . Our findings demonstrate that partial mycoheterotrophy is a trophic continuum between the extreme endpoints of autotrophy and full mycoheterotrophy, ranging from marginal to pronounced. In rhizoctonia‐associated orchids, partial mycoheterotrophy plays a far greater role than previously assumed, even in full light conditions.

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