4.7 Article

Distinct soil microbial communities under Ageratina adenophora invasions

Journal

PLANT BIOLOGY
Volume 24, Issue 3, Pages 430-439

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/plb.13387

Keywords

16S rRNA sequencing; Ageratina adenophora; plant invasion; rhizosphere soil; soil microbial community

Categories

Funding

  1. National Key R&D Program of China [2021YFC2600400, 2021YFD1400100]

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Ageratina adenophora is one of the most hazardous invasive weeds in China, causing changes in soil microbial communities and involving specific microbes in soil nutrient cycling. Soil pH is the main factor affecting microbial communities.
Ageratina adenophora is one of the most hazardous invasive weeds in China. It can form a single species community quickly and cause extensive ecological harm. The belowground microbial community can participate in nutrient transformation in soil and plays an important role in the invasiveness of exotic plant species. We selected sampling sites with different invasion levels of A. adenophora. The soil property and soil biogeochemical activity were measured in both bulk and rhizosphere soil under the aggressive weed A. adenophora and under adjacent native plants. The composition of bacterial communities was investigated using high-throughput 16S rRNA gene sequencing. We found that the rhizosphere habitat selectively accumulated Sphingomonas and Steroidobacter and reduced the abundance of Gaiella and Gp6 regardless of plant host. The presence of A. adenophora caused a switch in microbial composition from Aeromicrobium and Marmoricola to Reyranella and Bradyrhizobium in the bulk soil, and from Gp4, Pirellula, Lysobacter and Aridibacterrae to Reyranella and Streptomyces in the rhizosphere soil. We also revealed specific microbes that closely related with N-cycling processes. In addition, soil pH was the main factor affecting microbial communities in both bulk and rhizosphere soil. Our study confirmed that the rhizosphere environment imposed homogenous microbial communities. The invasion of A. adenophora selected specialized bacterial communities in soils and specific microbes that potentially mediated soil nutrition cycling. Our findings provide ecological explanation to explain how the underground microbes help A. adenophora invasive.

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