Foliar fungi and plant diversity drive ecosystem carbon fluxes in
experimental prairies
Abstract
Plant diversity and plant-consumer interactions likely interact to
influence ecosystem carbon fluxes but experimental evidence is scarce.
We examined how experimental removal of foliar fungi, soil fungi and
arthropods from experimental prairies planted with 1, 4 or 16 plant
species affected instantaneous rates of carbon uptake (GPP), ecosystem
respiration (Re) and net ecosystem exchange (NEE). Increased plant
diversity doubled plant biomass, in turn doubling GPP and Re, but NEE
remained unchanged. Removing foliar fungi increased GPP and NEE, with
greatest effects at low plant diversity. After accounting for plant
biomass, we found that removing foliar fungi increased mass-specific
flux rates by 48% by altering plant species composition and
community-wide foliar nitrogen content. However, this elevated NEE
effect disappeared when soil fungi and arthropods were also removed,
demonstrating ecosystem-scale impacts of interactions among consumer
groups. Thus, plant diversity and consumer context determine the effects
of plant-fungal interactions on ecosystem carbon fluxes.