Plant-driven fungal weathering: Early stages of mineral alteration at the nanometer scale

  1. Steeve Bonneville1,*,
  2. Mark M. Smits2,
  3. Andrew Brown3,
  4. John Harrington3,
  5. Jonathan R. Leake2,
  6. Rik Brydson3 and
  7. Liane G. Benning1
  1. 1Earth and Biosphere Institute, School of Earth and Environment, University of Leeds, Leeds LS2 9JT, UK
  2. 2Department of Animal and Plant Sciences, University of Sheffield, Western Bank, Sheffield S10 2TN, UK
  3. 3Leeds Electron Microscopy and Spectroscopy Centre, Institute for Materials Research, University of Leeds, Leeds LS2 9JT, UK
  1. *E-mail: s.bonneville{at}see.leeds.ac.uk.

Abstract

Plant-driven fungal weathering is a major pathway of soil formation, yet the precise mechanism by which mycorrhiza alter minerals is poorly understood. Here we report the first direct in situ observations of the effects of a soil fungus on the surface of a mineral over which it grew in a controlled experiment. An ectomycorrhizal fungus was grown in symbiosis with a tree seedling so that individual hyphae expanded across the surface of a biotite flake over a period of three months. Ultramicroscopic and spectroscopic analysis of the fungus-biotite interfaces revealed intimate fungal-mineral attachment, biomechanical forcing, altered interlayer spacings, substantial depletion of potassium (~50 nm depth), oxidation of the biotite Fe(II), and the formation of vermiculite and clusters of Fe(III) oxides. Our study demonstrates the biomechanical-chemical alteration interplay at the fungus-biotite interface at the nanometer scale. Specifically, the weathering process is initiated by physical distortion of the lattice structure of biotite within 1 μm of the attached fungal hypha. Only subsequently does the distorted volume become chemically altered through dissolution and oxidation reactions that lead to mineral neoformation.

Footnotes

  • GSA Data Repository item 2009144, (1) methods for cultivation, ion milling, TEM analysis and chemical composition of biotite and growth medium; (2) observations of hypha by Environmental SEM at various hydration states; and (3) raw data of STEM-EDS of lamella 3, is available online at www.geosociety.org/pubs/ft2009.htm, or on request from editing{at}geosociety.org or Documents Secretary, GSA, P.O. Box 9140, Boulder, CO 80301, USA.

    • Received 24 November 2008.
    • Revision received 13 February 2009.
    • Accepted 19 February 2009.
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