4.5 Article

Vertical Stratification of Microbial Communities in Woody Plants

Journal

PHYTOBIOMES JOURNAL
Volume 6, Issue 2, Pages 161-168

Publisher

AMER PHYTOPATHOLOGICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1094/PBIOMES-06-21-0038-R

Keywords

ecology; metabarcoding; microbial diversity; microbiome; microorganism; nestedness; plant-soil interactions; symbiosis

Funding

  1. Estonian Ministry of Education and Research (Eesti Teadusagentuur) [PRG1170]
  2. European Union through the European Regional Development Fund (the Center of Excellence: EcolChange) and Swedish Research Council (Vetenskapsradet) [2017-05019]

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Bacterial and fungal endophytes play a significant role in the performance and health of host plants. This study reveals that the structure of bacterial and fungal communities in trees is more influenced by the vertical location of tree compartments rather than the locality, species, and individuals of host trees. The microbial communities show stronger host specificity aboveground compared to belowground compartments. Bacterial communities are more influenced by environmental conditions, while fungal communities are more influenced by host identity.
Bacterial and fungal endophytes form diverse communities and contribute to the performance and health of their host plants. Recent evidence suggests that both host-related factors and environmental conditions determine the community structure of plant endophytes. However, we know little about their distribution patterns and underlying community assembly mechanisms across plant compartments. Here, we analyzed the structure of bacterial and fungal communities associated with tree compartments as well as their underlying soils across 12 tree individuals in boreal forests. We found that the structure of bacterial and fungal communities depends more strongly on the vertical location of tree compartments rather than the locality, species, and individuals of host trees. Microbial communities showed much stronger host specificity in aboveground than belowground compartments. Compared with fungal communities, the composition and diversity of bacterial communities were markedly more distinct between below- and aboveground components but not between hosts, reflecting the greater importance of environmental conditions rather than dispersal limitation and host identity in their community assembly. Our data suggest that spatial distance from soil as a major microbiome source contributes to the formation of microbiomes in plants, and that bacterial and fungal communities may follow contrasting assembly processes in associating with a single individual tree.

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