Litcius/Paper detail

Allelopathy‐selected microbiomes mitigate chemical inhibition of plant performance

Daniel Revillini, Aaron S. David, Alma L. Reyes, Leslie D. Knecht, Carolina Vigo, Preston Allen, Christopher A. Searcy, Michelle E. Afkhami

2023New Phytologist43 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Allelopathy is a common and important stressor that shapes plant communities and can alter soil microbiomes, yet little is known about the direct effects of allelochemical addition on bacterial and fungal communities or the potential for allelochemical-selected microbiomes to mediate plant performance responses, especially in habitats naturally structured by allelopathy. Here, we present the first community-wide investigation of microbial mediation of allelochemical effects on plant performance by testing how allelopathy affects soil microbiome structure and how these microbial changes impact germination and productivity across 13 plant species. The soil microbiome exhibited significant changes to 'core' bacterial and fungal taxa, bacterial composition, abundance of functionally important bacterial and fungal taxa, and predicted bacterial functional genes after the addition of the dominant allelochemical native to this habitat. Furthermore, plant performance was mediated by the allelochemical-selected microbiome, with allelopathic inhibition of plant productivity moderately mitigated by the microbiome. Through our findings, we present a potential framework to understand the strength of plant-microbial interactions in the presence of environmental stressors, in which frequency of the ecological stress may be a key predictor of microbiome-mediation strength.

Topics & Concepts

AllelopathyMicrobiomeBiologyEcologyMicrobial ecologyPlant communityMicrobial population biologyCommunityBotanyGerminationHabitatSpecies richnessBacteriaBioinformaticsGeneticsAllelopathy and phytotoxic interactionsPlant Parasitism and ResistanceMycorrhizal Fungi and Plant Interactions