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Soybean and Cotton Spermosphere Soil Microbiome Shows Dominance of Soilborne Copiotrophs

Oluwakemisola Olofintila, Zachary A. Noel

2023Microbiology Spectrum12 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The central hypothesis of this research was that plant species and seed exudate release would alter the assembly of microbes in the spermosphere soil. Our research investigated the response of microbes to the initial burst of nutrients into the spermosphere soil, filling knowledge gaps from previous studies that pregerminated seeds under sterile conditions. We identified several copiotrophic bacterial lineages with a long history of plant growth promotion proliferating in response to the initial exudate release. With a comparative network approach, we show that these copiotrophic bacteria are not central to networks, demonstrating that other microbes (including fungi) may be important for community structure. This study improves knowledge on microbial dynamics in the understudied spermosphere and helps inform solutions for biologically or ecologically motivated solutions to spermosphere pathogens.

Topics & Concepts

Dominance (genetics)MicrobiomeBiologyAgronomyGeneticsGeneInsect and Arachnid Ecology and BehaviorInsect and Pesticide ResearchNematode management and characterization studies
Soybean and Cotton Spermosphere Soil Microbiome Shows Dominance of Soilborne Copiotrophs | Litcius