
Mycorrhizal fungi—soil-dwelling fungi that exchange nutrients with plant roots—are important players in plant and soil health. A new study suggests they are also significant carbon pools.
Researchers estimated that the fungi receive the equivalent of 13 billion tons of carbon dioxide (CO2) annually from plants—equal to 36% of current annual fossil fuel emissions.
“This confirms that the carbon flux to mycorrhizal fungi is globally significant,” said Karina Clemmensen, a biologist at the Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences, who was not involved in the research.
Exceeding Expectations
Mycorrhizal fungi absorb water and mineral nutrients such as nitrogen, sulfur, and phosphorus from the soil and deliver those nutrients to their plant partners. In return, plants provide the fungi with sugars and fats produced during photosynthesis.
This mutualism between plants and fungi has a long history: Mycorrhizae have been found in plant fossils more than 400 million years old. Today, most land plants form relationships with mycorrhizal fungi. (Notable exceptions include mosses and cabbages.) The fungi form a vast subterranean web that stabilizes soils, shuttles nutrients toward Earth’s surface, and allows plants to grow and thrive.
Because plants supply mycorrhizal fungi with carbon-rich food, the fungal web can potentially transport—and store—large amounts of carbon. But so far, this potential has been underappreciated, said the study’s lead author, Heidi-Jayne Hawkins, an ecologist at the University of Cape Town and director of research at Conservation South Africa. “We have known for some time that these fungi are ubiquitous and vital across the planet,” she said, but “soil fungi are more difficult to study than organisms aboveground, and progress tends to be slower.”
To put a number on global mycorrhizal carbon cycling, Hawkins and her coauthors consulted 198 published data sets recording the percentage of plant-derived carbon that ends up in mycorrhizae. Some mycorrhizal fungi receive only 1% of a plant’s carbon budget, with the rest going into plant biomass; others receive far more.
The researchers combined this information with estimates of the total amount of atmospheric carbon taken in each year by various groups of plants. This enabled the authors to extrapolate how much carbon is allocated annually to mycorrhizal fungi.
The researchers compared their result with the total annual CO2 emissions from fossil fuels. “We were surprised that the flux to the fungi amounted to 36% [of CO2 from fossil fuel emissions],” Hawkins said. The high carbon flux implied that mycorrhizal fungi can influence atmospheric CO2 concentrations and could amplify or reduce global warming.