4.7 Article

Soil Microbiome Influences on Seedling Establishment and Growth of Prosopis chilensis and Prosopis tamarugo from Northern Chile

Journal

PLANTS-BASEL
Volume 11, Issue 20, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/plants11202717

Keywords

northern Chile; Prosopis chilensis; Prosopis tamarugo; Atacama Desert; soil microbiome; plant-microbe interactions

Categories

Funding

  1. National Genomics Infrastructure in Genomics Production Stockholm - Science for Life Laboratory
  2. Knut and Alice Wallenberg Foundation
  3. Swedish Research Council
  4. Umea Plant Science Centre bioinformatics facility (UPSCb)
  5. Chile Scholarship program (ANID 2015 ) [72160239]
  6. Swedish University of Agricultural Science's Trees and Crops for the Future (TC4F) program
  7. Swedish Research Council [2018-05973]

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This study investigated the establishment and growth potential of two Prosopis species in different soils and the role of root-colonizing microbiome in this process. The results suggested that soil properties and microbial communities play potential roles in mediating the establishment success of Prosopis in different soils.
Prosopis chilensis and Prosopis tamarugo, two woody legumes adapted to the arid regions of Chile, have a declining distribution due to the lack of new seedling establishment. This study investigated the potential of both species to establish in soil collected from four locations in Chile, within and outside the species distribution, and to assess the role of the root-colonizing microbiome in seedling establishment and growth. Seedling survival, height, and water potential were measured to assess establishment success and growth. 16S and ITS2 amplicon sequencing was used to characterize the composition of microbial communities from the different soils and to assess the ability of both Prosopis species to recruit bacteria and fungi from the different soils. Both species were established on three of the four soils. P. tamarugo seedlings showed significantly higher survival in foreign soils and maintained significantly higher water potential in Mediterranean soils. Amplicon sequencing showed that the four soils harbored distinct microbial communities. Root-associated microbial composition indicated that P. chilensis preferentially recruited mycorrhizal fungal partners while P. tamarugo recruited abundant bacteria with known salt-protective functions. Our results suggest that a combination of edaphic properties and microbial soil legacy are potential factors mediating the Prosopis establishment success in different soils.

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