4.5 Article

Divergent assembly processes? A comparison of the plant and soil microbiome with plant communities in a glacier forefield

Journal

FEMS MICROBIOLOGY ECOLOGY
Volume 97, Issue 10, Pages -

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/femsec/fiab135

Keywords

bacteria; dispersal; environmental filter; fungi; glacier forefield; interaction filter

Categories

Funding

  1. START programof the Austrian Science Fund (FWF) [Y1102]
  2. Austrian Science Fund (FWF) [Y1102] Funding Source: Austrian Science Fund (FWF)

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The study indicates that there are differences in community assembly processes between microbes and plants, with microbes being less dispersal limited and plants strongly responding to abiotic factors. Furthermore, the leaf microbiome of plants is species-specific and well buffered from environmental conditions.
Community assembly is a result of dispersal, abiotic and biotic characteristics of the habitat as well as stochasticity. A direct comparison between the assembly of microbial and `macrobial' organisms is hampered by the sampling of these communities in different studies, at different sites or on different scales. In a glacier forefield in the Austrian Alps, we recorded the soil and plant microbiome (bacteria and fungi) and plants that occurred in the same landscape and in close proximity in the same plots. We tested five predictions deduced from assembly processes and revealed deviating patterns of assembly in these community types. In short, microbes appeared to be less dispersal limited than plants and soil microbes, and plants strongly responded to abiotic factors whereas the leaf microbiome was plant species specific and well buffered from environmental conditions. The observed differences in community assembly processes may be attributed to the organisms' dispersal abilities, the exposure of the habitats to airborne propagules and habitat characteristics. The finding that assembly is conditional to the characteristics of the organisms, the habitat and the spatial scale under consideration is thus central for our understanding about the establishment and the maintenance of biodiversity.

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