Abstract
Trait-based approaches have been increasingly used to relate plants to soil microbial communities. However, the plant organs mediating this plant-microbe interaction – the roots – have been largely overlooked. The recent discovery of the root economics space offers a predictive framework for the structure of soil microbial communities, and specifically soil-borne fungal communities. Applying this novel approach, our study in a grassland plant diversity experiment reveals distinct root trait strategies at the level of the plant community. In addition to significant effects of plant species richness, we show that both axes of the root economics space – the collaboration and conservation gradient – are strong drivers of the composition of the different guilds of soil fungi, including saprotrophic, plant pathogenic, and mycorrhizal fungi. Our results illustrate that the root economics space and plant species richness jointly determine the effects of plants on fungal communities and their potential role in plant health and ecosystem functioning.
Competing Interest Statement
The authors have declared no competing interest.