Soil fungi promote the positive diversity-productivity relationship of
young tree communities under contrasting water availability
- Catherine Fahey,
- William Parker,
- Alain Paquette,
- Christian Messier,
- Pedro Madeira Antunes
Abstract
Plant diversity has often been linked to increased productivity.
However, this apparent diversity-productivity relationship for plants
may rely on interactions with microbes. Furthermore, these relationships
are likely to be context dependent in response to resource availability.
We used a biodiversity-ecosystem function experiment with trees exposed
to high and low water availability treatments to determine if soil
fungal communities mediate the diversity-productivity relationship. We
found that richness and community composition of soil fungi and the
interaction between plant pathogen and ectomycorrhizal richness were
significant drivers of above-ground productivity and supported indirect,
positive effects of tree species richness and functional diversity on
productivity. Soil fungi also mediated tree water relations, reducing
the effect of water limitation on productivity. Fungal communities were
important drivers of positive net diversity and complementarity effects
on productivity. Our study provides evidence that soil fungi play an
important role in diversity-productivity relationships under variable
water availability.