Plant-driven fungal weathering: Early stages of mineral alteration at the nanometer scale
- Steeve Bonneville1,*,
- Mark M. Smits2,
- Andrew Brown3,
- John Harrington3,
- Jonathan R. Leake2,
- Rik Brydson3 and
- Liane G. Benning1
- 1Earth and Biosphere Institute, School of Earth and Environment, University of Leeds, Leeds LS2 9JT, UK
- 2Department of Animal and Plant Sciences, University of Sheffield, Western Bank, Sheffield S10 2TN, UK
- 3Leeds Electron Microscopy and Spectroscopy Centre, Institute for Materials Research, University of Leeds, Leeds LS2 9JT, UK
- *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
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↵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.
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- Received 24 November 2008.
- Revision received 13 February 2009.
- Accepted 19 February 2009.
- © 2009 Geological Society of America












