Mutualism outcome across plant populations, microbes, and environments in the duckweed Lemna minor
Mutualism outcome across plant populations, microbes, and environments in the duckweed Lemna minor
Abstract The picture emerging from the rapidly growing literature on host-associated micro-biota is that host traits and fitness often depend on complex and interactive effects of host genotype, microbial interactions, and abiotic environment. However, testing these main and interactive effects typically requires large, multi-factorial experiments and thus remains challenging in many systems. Furthermore, most studies of plant microbiomes focus on terrestrial hosts and microbes. Aquatic habitats may confer unique properties to plant micriobiomes. We grew different populations of duck-weed (Lemna minor), a floating aquatic plant of increasing popularity in freshwater phytoremediation, in three microbial treatments (adding no, “home”, or “away” microbes) at two levels of zinc, a common water contaminant in urban areas. Thus, we simultaneously manipulated plant source population, microbial community, and the abiotic environment, and measured both plant and microbial performance as well as plant traits. Although we found little evidence of interactive effects, we found strong main effects of plant source, microbial treatment, and zinc on both duckweed and microbial growth, with significant variation among both duckweed and microbial communities. Despite strong growth alignment between duckweed and microbes, zinc consistently decreased plant growth, but increased microbial growth. Furthermore, as in recent studies of terrestrial plants, microbial interactions altered a duckweed phenotype (frond aggregation). Our results suggest that the duckweed source population, its associated microbiome, and the contaminant environment may all need to be considered in real-world phytoremediation efforts. Lastly, we propose that duckweed microbes offer a robust experimental system for study of host-microbiota interactions under a range of environmental stresses.
O?ˉBrien Anna M.、Lash Emma、Frederickson Megan E、Laurich Jason
Deptartment of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, University of TorontoDeptartment of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, University of TorontoDeptartment of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, University of TorontoDeptartment of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, University of Toronto
植物学微生物学环境科学基础理论
biotic interactionsfreshwater ecosystemsduckweedhost-microbe interactionsphytoremediationzinc
O?ˉBrien Anna M.,Lash Emma,Frederickson Megan E,Laurich Jason.Mutualism outcome across plant populations, microbes, and environments in the duckweed Lemna minor[EB/OL].(2025-03-28)[2025-05-06].https://www.biorxiv.org/content/10.1101/448951.点此复制
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