Roots and Associated Fungi Drive Long-Term Carbon Sequestration in Boreal Forest
Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences · Lund University · +4 more institutions
Abstract
Boreal forest soils function as a terrestrial net sink in the global carbon cycle. The prevailing dogma has focused on aboveground plant litter as a principal source of soil organic matter. Using (14)C bomb-carbon modeling, we show that 50 to 70% of stored carbon in a chronosequence of boreal forested islands derives from roots and root-associated microorganisms. Fungal biomarkers indicate impaired degradation and preservation of fungal residues in late successional forests. Furthermore, 454 pyrosequencing of molecular barcodes, in conjunction with stable isotope analyses, highlights root-associated fungi as important regulators of ecosystem carbon dynamics. Our results suggest an alternative mechanism for the…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 113.85
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 46
Authors
10Topics & keywords
- Chronosequence
- Taiga
- Carbon cycle
- Boreal
- Ecological succession
- Decomposer
- Ecosystem
- Environmental science
- Life in Land