Laurel Kluber, Crop and Soil Science, Oregon State University, Oregon State University, 3017 ALS Bldg, Corvallis, OR 97330 and David D. Myrold, Crop & Soil Science, Oregon State University, 3017 ALS Building, Corvallis, OR 97331.
The distinct rhizomorphic mats
formed by ectomycorrhizal Piloderma fungi are
significant features of the organic soil horizons of coniferous forests
throughout the Pacific Northwest. Through their
activities, EM mats can create a unique soil environment and likely result in
the establishment of distinct microbial communities and activities. As part of
an NSF-funded Microbial Observatory at the H.J.
Andrews Experimental
Forest in western Oregon, we are determining the microbial
community structure and function of EM mats in a Douglas-fir-dominated forest
ecosystem. Previous surveys have shown Piloderma to be a dominant
mat-forming EM genus with an average chitinase
activity ~1.5 times greater than non-mat soils. These facts indicate that Piloderma
mats likely plays an important ecological role in this nitrogen-limited forest
ecosystem. This poster will present the results of a year-long temporal study
examining the seasonal dynamics of microbial community composition and chitinase activity in Piloderma mat and
corresponding non-mat soils. The results of this study aim to elucidate the
response of the EM microbial communities to the phenological
allocation of carbon.