INVESTIGADORES
FANJUL Maria Eugenia
artículos
Título:
Ecosystem engineers activate mycorrhizal mutualism in salt marshes
Autor/es:
DALEO, PEDRO; FANJUL, EUGENIA; MENDEZ CASARIEGO, AGUSTINA; SILLIMAN, BRIAN R; BERTNESS, MARK; IRIBARNE, OSCAR
Revista:
ECOLOGY LETTERS
Editorial:
WILEY-BLACKWELL PUBLISHING, INC
Referencias:
Año: 2007 vol. 10 p. 902 - 902
ISSN:
1461-023X
Resumen:
Theory predicts that ecosystem engineers should have their most dramatic effects when they enable species, through habitat amelioration, to live in zones where physical and biological conditions would otherwise suppress or limit them. Mutualisms between mycorrhizal fungi and plants are key determinants of productivity and biodiversity in most terrestrial systems, but are thought to be unimportant in wetlands because anoxic sediments exclude fungal symbionts. Our field surveys revealed arbuscular mycorrhizal associations on salt marsh plant roots, but only in the presence of crabs that oxygenate soils as a by-product of burrowing. Field experiments demonstrate that fungal colonization is dependent on crab burrowing and responsible for nearly 35% of plant growth. These results highlight ecosystem engineers as ecological linchpins that can activate and maintain key mutualisms between species. Our findings align salt marshes with other important biogenic habitats whose productivity is reliant on mutualisms between the primary foundation species and micro-organisms.