Literature DB >> 29645089

Nitrogen enrichment suppresses other environmental drivers and homogenizes salt marsh leaf microbiome.

Pedro Daleo1, Juan Alberti1, Ari Jumpponen2, Allison Veach2,3, Florencia Ialonardi1, Oscar Iribarne1, Brian Silliman4.   

Abstract

Microbial community assembly is affected by a combination of forces that act simultaneously, but the mechanisms underpinning their relative influences remain elusive. This gap strongly limits our ability to predict human impacts on microbial communities and the processes they regulate. Here, we experimentally demonstrate that increased salinity stress, food web alteration and nutrient loading interact to drive outcomes in salt marsh fungal leaf communities. Both salinity stress and food web alterations drove communities to deterministically diverge, resulting in distinct fungal communities. Increased nutrient loads, nevertheless, partially suppressed the influence of other factors as determinants of fungal assembly. Using a null model approach, we found that increased nutrient loads enhanced the relative importance of stochastic over deterministic divergent processes; without increased nutrient loads, samples from different treatments showed a relatively (deterministic) divergent community assembly whereas increased nutrient loads drove the system to more stochastic assemblies, suppressing the effect of other treatments. These results demonstrate that common anthropogenic modifications can interact to control fungal community assembly. Furthermore, our results suggest that when the environmental conditions are spatially heterogeneous (as in our case, caused by specific combinations of experimental treatments), increased stochasticity caused by greater nutrient inputs can reduce the importance of deterministic filters that otherwise caused divergence, thus driving to microbial community homogenization.
© 2018 by the Ecological Society of America.

Entities:  

Keywords:  zzm321990Spartinazzm321990; deterministic vs. neutral processes; leaf fungal communities; microbial community assembly; nutrient loading; salt marshes

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2018        PMID: 29645089     DOI: 10.1002/ecy.2240

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Ecology        ISSN: 0012-9658            Impact factor:   5.499


  2 in total

1.  Insufficient sampling constrains our characterization of plant microbiomes.

Authors:  Lorinda S Bullington; Ylva Lekberg; Beau G Larkin
Journal:  Sci Rep       Date:  2021-02-11       Impact factor: 4.379

2.  Compartment and Plant Identity Shape Tree Mycobiome in a Subtropical Forest.

Authors:  Hao Yang; Zhijie Yang; Quan-Cheng Wang; Yong-Long Wang; Hang-Wei Hu; Ji-Zheng He; Yong Zheng; Yusheng Yang
Journal:  Microbiol Spectr       Date:  2022-07-12
  2 in total

北京卡尤迪生物科技股份有限公司 © 2022-2023.