4.8 Article

Shifting microbial communities can enhance tree tolerance to changing climates

Journal

SCIENCE
Volume 380, Issue 6647, Pages 835-840

Publisher

AMER ASSOC ADVANCEMENT SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1126/science.adf2027

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Climate change is pushing species beyond their natural limits, but shifts in microbial associations may provide an alternative source of climate tolerance for plants. Tree seedlings inoculated with microbial communities from different temperature sites displayed higher survival rates when faced with corresponding temperature stresses. Understanding microbially mediated climate tolerance may help predict and manage the adaptability of forest ecosystems to changing climates.
Climate change is pushing species outside of their evolved tolerances. Plant populations must acclimate, adapt, or migrate to avoid extinction. However, because plants associate with diverse microbial communities that shape their phenotypes, shifts in microbial associations may provide an alternative source of climate tolerance. Here, we show that tree seedlings inoculated with microbial communities sourced from drier, warmer, or colder sites displayed higher survival when faced with drought, heat, or cold stress, respectively. Microbially mediated drought tolerance was associated with increased diversity of arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi, whereas cold tolerance was associated with lower fungal richness, likely reflecting a reduced burden of nonadapted fungal taxa. Understanding microbially mediated climate tolerance may enhance our ability to predict and manage the adaptability of forest ecosystems to changing climates.

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