Mixotrophy in Pyroleae (Ericaceae) from Estonian boreal forests does not vary with light or tissue age
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Titre | Mixotrophy in Pyroleae (Ericaceae) from Estonian boreal forests does not vary with light or tissue age |
Type de publication | Journal Article |
Year of Publication | 2017 |
Auteurs | Lallemand F, Puttsepp U, Lang M, Luud A, Courty P-E, Palancade C, Selosse M-A |
Journal | ANNALS OF BOTANY |
Volume | 120 |
Pagination | 361-371 |
Date Published | SEP |
Type of Article | Article |
ISSN | 0305-7364 |
Mots-clés | C-13, Chimaphila, Ericaceae, Mixotrophy, Moneses, mycoheterotrophy, N content, orchids, Orthilia, Pyrola, response to light, Stable isotopes |
Résumé | Background and Aims In temperate forests, some green plants, namely pyroloids (Pyroleae, Ericaceae) and some orchids, independently evolved a mode of nutrition mixing photosynthates and carbon gained from their mycorrhizal fungi (mixotrophy). Fungal carbon is more enriched in C-13 than photosynthates, allowing estimation of the proportion of carbon acquired heterotrophically from fungi in plant biomass. Based on C-13 enrichment, mixotrophic orchids have previously been shown to increase shoot autotrophy level over the growth season and with environmental light availability. But little is known about the plasticity of use of photosynthetic versus fungal carbon in pyroloids. Methods Plasticity of mixotrophy with leaf age or light level (estimated from canopy openness) was investigated in pyroloids from three Estonian boreal forests. Bulk leaf C-13 enrichment of five pyroloid species was compared with that of control autotrophic plants along temporal series (over one growth season) and environmental light gradients (n= 405 samples). Key Results Mixotrophic C-13 enrichment was detected at studied sites for Pyrola chlorantha and Orthilia secunda (except at one site for the latter), but not for Chimaphila umbellata, Pyrola rotundifolia and Moneses uniflora. Enrichment with C-13 did not vary over the growth season or between leaves from current and previous years. Finally, although one co-occurring mixotrophic orchid showed C-13 depletion with increasing light availability, as expected for mixotrophs, all pyroloids responded identically to autotrophic control plants along light gradients. Conclusions A phylogenetic trend previously observed is further supported: mixotrophy is rarely supported by C-13 enrichment in the Chimaphila + Moneses clade, whereas it is frequent in the Pyrola + Orthilia clade. Moreover, pyroloid mixotrophy does not respond plastically to ageing or to light level. This contrasts with the usual view of a convergent evolution with orchids, and casts doubt on the way pyroloids use the carbon gained from their mycorrhizal fungi, especially to replace photosynthetic carbon. |
DOI | 10.1093/aob/mcx054 |