4.8 Article

Protist diversity and community complexity in the rhizosphere of switchgrass are dynamic as plants develop

期刊

MICROBIOME
卷 9, 期 1, 页码 -

出版社

BMC
DOI: 10.1186/s40168-021-01042-9

关键词

Soil protist; Soil microbiome; Switchgrass; Rhizosphere; Community assembly

资金

  1. U.S. Department of Energy Office of Science, Office of Biological and Environmental Research Genomic Science program [DE-SC0014079]
  2. Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory under United States Department of Energy [DE-AC02-05CH11231]
  3. DOE [DE-AC52-07NA27344]
  4. [SCW1555]

向作者/读者索取更多资源

This study reveals that protist communities in the rhizosphere are influenced by plant-driven environmental filtering, showing lower diversity compared to bulk soil, with temporal variations depending on soil properties. Prevalent protist groups in the rhizosphere play varied ecological roles across plant growth stages, with some pathogenic and omnivorous protists recurring over time. The co-occurrence network dynamics in the rhizosphere are more complex than in bulk soil, and community assembly is mainly controlled by homogenous selection and dispersal limitation, with stronger selection in rhizosphere as the plant grows and senesces.
Background: Despite their widespread distribution and ecological importance, protists remain one of the least understood components of the soil and rhizosphere microbiome. Knowledge of the roles that protists play in stimulating organic matter decomposition and shaping microbiome dynamics continues to grow, but there remains a need to understand the extent to which biological and environmental factors mediate protist community assembly and dynamics. We hypothesize that protists communities are filtered by the influence of plants on their rhizosphere biological and physicochemical environment, resulting in patterns of protist diversity and composition that mirror previously observed diversity and successional dynamics in rhizosphere bacterial communities. Results: We analyzed protist communities associated with the rhizosphere and bulk soil of switchgrass (SG) plants (Panicum virgatum) at different phenological stages, grown in two marginal soils as part of a large-scale field experiment. Our results reveal that the diversity of protists is lower in rhizosphere than bulk soils, and that temporal variations depend on soil properties but are less pronounced in rhizosphere soil. Patterns of significantly prevalent protists groups in the rhizosphere suggest that most protists play varied ecological roles across plant growth stages and that some plant pathogenic protists and protists with omnivorous diets reoccur over time in the rhizosphere. We found that protist co-occurrence network dynamics are more complex in the rhizosphere compared to bulk soil. A phylogenetic bin-based null model analysis showed that protists' community assembly in our study sites is mainly controlled by homogenous selection and dispersal limitation, with stronger selection in rhizosphere than bulk soil as SG grew and senesced. Conclusions: We demonstrate that environmental filtering is a dominant determinant of overall protist community properties and that at the rhizosphere level, plant control on the physical and biological environment is a critical driver of protist community composition and dynamics. Since protists are key contributors to plant nutrient availability and bacterial community composition and abundance, mapping and understanding their patterns in rhizosphere soil is foundational to understanding the ecology of the root-microbe-soil system.

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