Mycorrhizal plants are commonly believed to direct much more of their photosynthates into the soil than non-mycorrhizal plants.
As the growth of most organisms of the detrital food web is limited by energy, the flow of C through mycorrhizal plants into
the below-ground milieu is widely assumed to nourish a variety of decomposer organisms in soils. In the current experiment,
I explored whether some representatives of soil mesofauna, either fungivores or microbi-detritivores, derive benefit from
the presence of ectomycorrhizal (EM) fungi growing on the roots of Scots pine (
Pinus sylvestris). I also investigated whether the role of soil mesofauna in affecting pine growth depends on the presence of EM fungi in
the pine rhizosphere. The study was established in microcosms with a mixture of raw humus and sand. The soil was defaunated,
reinoculated with 10 species of soil bacteria and 11 species of saprophytic soil fungi, and pine seedlings, either infected
or non-infected with four taxa of EM fungi, were planted in the microcosms. Five treatments with different food web configurations
were established: (1) saprophytic microbes alone, (2) as (1) but with the omnivorous enchytraeid species
Cognettia sphagnetorum present, (3) as (1) but with Collembola (
Hypogastrura assimilis), (4) as (1) but with four species of oribatid mites (Acari) involved, and (5) as 1) but with
C.
sphagnetorum,
H.
assimilis and the Acari. The microcosms were incubated in a climate chamber with varying temperature and illumination regimes for two
growing periods for the pine. After 60 weeks, pine biomass production was significantly greater in the mycorrhizal systems,
the total biomass being 1.43 times higher in the presence than absence of EM fungi. Similarly, almost ten times more fungal
biomass was detected on pine roots growing in the mycorrhizal than in the non-mycorrhizal systems. The presence of EM fungi
was also associated with significantly lowered pH and percent organic matter of the soil. Despite the clearly larger biomass
of both the pines and the fungi on the pine roots, neither the numbers nor biomasses of the mesofauna differed significantly
between the EM and non-EM systems. The presence of Collembola and
C.
sphagnetorum had a positive influence on pine growth, particularly in the absence of EM fungi, whereas oribatid mites had no effects on
pine growth. The complexity of the mesofaunal community was not related to the biomass production of the pines in a straightforward
manner; for example, the complex systems with each faunal group present did not produce more pine biomass than the simple
systems where
C.
sphagnetorum existed alone. The results of this experiment suggest that the short-term role of EM fungi in fuelling the detrital food
web is less significant than generally considered, but that their role as active decomposers and/or stimulators of the activity
of saprophytic microbes can be more important than is often believed.
Key words Cognettia sphagnetorum - Mycorrhiza - Nutrient cycling - Pine rhizosphere - Soil food web
Received: 22 December 1999 / Accepted: 14 April 2000