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Fungal-Bacterial Cooccurrence Patterns Differ between Arbuscular Mycorrhizal Fungi and Nonmycorrhizal Fungi across Soil Niches

Mengting Yuan, Anne Kakouridis, Evan Starr, Nhu Nguyen, Shengjing Shi, Jennifer Pett‐Ridge, Erin Nuccio, Jizhong Zhou, Mary K. Firestone

2021mBio104 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Soils near living and decomposing roots form distinct niches that promote microorganisms with distinctive environmental preferences and interactions. Yet few studies have assessed the community-level cooccurrence of bacteria and fungi in these soil niches as plant roots grow and senesce. With plant growth, we observed increasingly complex cooccurrence networks between nonmycorrhizal fungi and bacteria in the rhizosphere, while mycorrhizal fungal (AMF) and bacterial cooccurrence was more pronounced in soil further from roots, in the presence of decaying root litter. This rarely documented phenomenon suggests niche sharing of nonmycorrhizal fungi and bacteria, versus niche partitioning between AMF and bacteria; both patterns are likely driven by C substrate availability and quality. Although the implications of species cooccurrence are fiercely debated, MAGs matching the bacterial nodes in our networks possess the functional potential to interact with the fungi that they are linked to, suggesting an ecological significance of fungal-bacterial cooccurrence patterns.

Topics & Concepts

Ecological nicheBiologyArbuscular mycorrhizal fungiNicheBotanyMicroorganismSoil microbiologySoil waterEcologyFungusSymbiosisBacteriaHorticultureHabitatGeneticsInoculationMycorrhizal Fungi and Plant InteractionsPlant Parasitism and ResistancePlant and animal studies
Fungal-Bacterial Cooccurrence Patterns Differ between Arbuscular Mycorrhizal Fungi and Nonmycorrhizal Fungi across Soil Niches | Litcius