| Literature DB >> 29134155 |
Geoffrey Zahn1, Anthony S Amend2.
Abstract
There has been very little effort to incorporate foliar microbiomes into plant conservation efforts even though foliar endophytes are critically important to the fitness and function of hosts. Many critically endangered plants that have been extirpated from the wild are dependent on regular fungicidal applications in greenhouses that cannot be maintained for remote out-planted populations, which quickly perish. These fungicides negatively impact potentially beneficial fungal symbionts, which may reduce plant defenses to pathogens once fungicide treatments are stopped. Using the host/parasite system of Phyllostegia kaalaensis and Neoerysiphe galeopsidis, we conducted experiments to test total foliar microbiome transplants from healthy wild relatives onto fungicide-dependent endangered plants in an attempt to mitigate disease and reduce dependency on fungicides. Plants were treated with total microbiome transplants or cultured subsets of this community and monitored for disease severity. High-throughput DNA screening of fungal ITS1 rDNA was used to track the leaf-associated fungal communities and evaluate the effectiveness of transplantation methods. Individuals receiving traditionally isolated fungal treatments showed no improvement, but those receiving applications of a simple leaf slurry containing an uncultured fungal community showed significant disease reduction, to which we partially attribute an increase in the mycoparasitic Pseudozyma aphidis. These results were replicated in two independent experimental rounds. Treated plants have since been moved to a native habitat and, as of this writing, remain disease-free. Our results demonstrate the effectiveness of a simple low-tech method for transferring beneficial microbes from healthy wild plants to greenhouse-raised plants with reduced symbiotic microbiota. This technique was effective at reducing disease, and in conferring increased survival to an out-planted population of critically endangered plants. It was not effective in a closely related plant. Plant conservation efforts should strive to include foliar microbes as part of comprehensive management plans.Entities:
Keywords: Conservation methods; Endangered plants; Fungal endophytes; Microbiomes; Plant pathogens; Tropical biology
Year: 2017 PMID: 29134155 PMCID: PMC5683046 DOI: 10.7717/peerj.4020
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PeerJ ISSN: 2167-8359 Impact factor: 2.984
Figure 1Plant disease progression for both experimental rounds.
Disease severity over time for each plant species during each experimental trial, measured as percentage of leaf area visibly infected by powdery mildew. (A and B)—P. kaalaensis; (C and D)—P. mollis. The first trial (A and C) lasted 30 days and the second trial (B and D) lasted 90 days. P. kaalaensis plants receiving the whole leaf slurry had delayed infections and reduced overall infection severity (black lines). Error bars represent 95% CI around the mean.
Figure 2Taxonomic compositions of the two experimental donor inoculae.
Species compositions (relative abundance) for each inoculum treatment, during both experimental trials. Both the fungal isolates (A) and the whole leaf slurries (B) were dominated by a single taxon. Taxonomy reflects assignments to the UNITE fungal ITS database.
Figure 3Disease severity as a function of P. aphidis abundance.
N. galeopsidis infection severity as a function of P. aphidis abundance. Higher P. aphidis abundance was negatively correlated with infection severity. This figure shows data from P. kaalaensis observations over both experimental rounds. Line represents loess smoothing and gray area represents 95% CI around the mean.