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Dynamics of C natural abundance in wood decomposing fungi and their ecophysiological implications
Authors:Ayato Kohzu  Toshihiro Miyajima  Takashi Watanabe  Eitaro Wada
Institution:a Japan Science and Technology Agency, 509-3, Hirano-Nichome, Otsu, Shiga 520-2113, Japan
b Ocean Research Institute, University of Tokyo, Tokyo 164-8639, Japan
c Graduate School of Agriculture, Kyoto University, Kyoto 606-8502, Japan
d Research Institute for Sustainable Humanosphere, Kyoto University, Uji, Kyoto 611-0011, Japan
e Frontier Research Center for Global Change, 3173-25 Showamachi, Kanazawa-ku, Yokohama 236-0001, Japan
Abstract:Factors that affect the δ13C values of fungi need to be analyzed for the progress of isotope-based studies of food-chain or organic matter dynamics in soils. To analyze the factors that control δ13C values of the fungal body, basidiomycete and ascomycete species were grown on a beechwood substrate (six species) and in glucose medium (nine species), and the δ13C value of produced fungal body was compared to that of the carbon source. The 13C enrichment (Δδ13C) in the fungal aggregates compared to the decomposed wood varied from 1.2 to 6.3‰ among six species. In the glucose substrate experiment, the degree of 13C enrichment in the hyphal mat was relatively small and varied from −0.1 to 2.8‰ among nine basidiomycetes species depending on their growth stage. Calculated δ13C values of the respired CO2 were lower than those of the hyphal mat, organic metabolites and the glucose used. The degree of 13C enrichment was affected by fungal species, substrate and growth stage. Fungal internal metabolic processes are the plausible mechanism for the observed isotopic discrimination between fungal bodies and substrates. Especially, dark fixation of ambient CO2 and kinetic isotope fractionation during assimilation and dissimilation reactions could well explain Δδ13C dynamics in our experiments. Through the analysis of field Δδ13C, we could know undisturbed fungal status about starvation, aeration and type of decomposition.
Keywords:Carbon isotopes  Detritus food chain  Fungi  Invertebrates  Isotope fractionation  Beech wood  White rot  Brown rot
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