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Contrasting Patterns in Diversity and Community Assembly of Phragmites australis Root-Associated Bacterial Communities from Different Seasons

Rujia He, Jin Zeng, Dayong Zhao, Rui Huang, Zhongbo Yu, Qinglong L. Wu

2020Applied and Environmental Microbiology68 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Understanding the composition and assembly mechanisms of root-associated microbial communities of plants is crucial for understanding the interactions between plants and soil. Most previous studies of the plant root-associated microbiome focused on model and economic plants, with fewer temporal or seasonal investigations. The assembly mechanisms of root-associated bacterial communities in different seasons remain poorly known, especially for the aquatic macrophytes. In this study, we compared the diversity, composition, and relative importance of two different assembly processes (stochastic and deterministic processes) of bacterial communities associated with bulk sediment and the rhizosphere and endosphere of Phragmites australis in summer and winter. While we found apparent differences in composition, diversity, and assembly processes of bacterial communities among different compartments, season played important roles in determining BCCs and their diversity patterns and assemblages. We also found that endosphere bacteria mainly originated from the rhizosphere. The results add new knowledge regarding the plant-microbe interactions in aquatic ecosystems.

Topics & Concepts

PhragmitesRhizosphereBiologyMicrobiomeEcologyMacrophyteCommunity structureBotanyMicrobial population biologyEcosystemWetlandBacteriaGeneticsBioinformaticsCoastal wetland ecosystem dynamicsMicrobial Community Ecology and PhysiologyLegume Nitrogen Fixing Symbiosis