Skip to main content

Evaluating the impact of differences in remnant and reconstruction mycorrhizas on performance of conservative prairie plant species

Dates

Publication Date
Start Date
2022-04-13
End Date
2023-04-11

Citation

Larson, D.L., Larson, J.L., Huerd, S., Aldrich-Wolfe, L., Prado-Ragan, E., Jordan, N., Kruenegel, H., Warner, S., Drobney, P., and Vacek, S., 2024, Evaluating the impact of differences in remnant and reconstruction mycorrhizas on performance of conservative prairie plant species: U.S. Geological Survey data release, https://doi.org/10.5066/P138FQQI.

Summary

This data record contains arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi (AMF) operational taxonomic unit (OTU) occurrences in native prairie plant roots collected from remnant prairies and reconstruction of tallgrass prairies in Minnesota and Iowa, from April-December of 2022. The research aims to improve prairie reconstruction methods using AMF to improve prairie plant performance, species diversity, and resistance to invasive cool-season grasses. The data in this release includes 5 data sets. Three describe the AMF: 1) SampleID_and_OTU_readcount_tier2_data.csv provides the number of reads for each OTU identified in each sample; 2) OTU_assigned_taxonomy_FunGuild.csv includes a collated list of all the taxonomic guilds of the identified OTUs; 3) AMF_phylotypes.csv [...]

Contacts

Attached Files

Click on title to download individual files attached to this item.

USGS_metadata_secondreview_2.5.xml
“AMF for restoration metadata”
Original FGDC Metadata

View
67.03 KB application/fgdc+xml
SampleID_and_OTU_readcount_tier2_data.csv
“Sample ID and OTU readout”
1.56 MB text/csv
Greenhousecountdata.csv
“Greenhouse experiments plant growth data”
175.1 KB text/csv
OTU_assigned_taxonomy_FunGuild.csv
“OTU assigned taxonomy - functional guilds”
28.14 KB text/csv
Competition_experiment_SamplesIds_and_replicates.csv
“Sample IDs and replicates for competition experiment”
39.64 KB text/csv
AMF_phylotypes.csv
“AMF phylotypes”
2.24 KB text/csv

Purpose

Increasing the resiliency and efficiency of reconstructed prairies is critical for conserving prairie ecosystems, supporting pollinators, as well as boosting the ecosystem services required for land-based agriculture. Arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi (AMF) are root symbiotrophs that may be key in increasing resiliency and species richness in reconstructed prairie habitat. We hypothesized that AMF fungi are important for the establishment of a successful prairie reconstruction site. In the second tier of this research, our project aimed to compare the performance of plants inoculated with AMF from remnant prairies to plants inoculated with AMF from planned reconstruction sites. Secondly, we hypothesized that prairie plants inoculated with AMF from remnant prairie soil will perform better when competing against invasive cool-season grasses. To test this, we grew native prairie plants alongside two cool-season invasive grasses and compared the performance of native prairie plants when inoculated with AMF from remnant vs planned reconstruction prairie sites.

Map

Communities

  • USGS Data Release Products

Tags

Categories
Harvest Set
Theme
USGS Scientific Topic Keyword

Provenance

Additional Information

Identifiers

Type Scheme Key
DOI https://www.sciencebase.gov/vocab/category/item/identifier doi:10.5066/P138FQQI

Item Actions

View Item as ...

Save Item as ...

View Item...