Range-expansion effects on the belowground plant microbiome
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Publication date
2019-04
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taverne
Abstract
Plant range expansion is occurring at a rapid pace, largely in response to human-induced climate warming. Although the movement of plants along latitudinal and altitudinal gradients is well-documented, effects on belowground microbial communities remain largely unknown. Furthermore, for range expansion, not all plant species are equal: in a new range, the relatedness between range-expanding plant species and native flora can influence plant-microorganism interactions. Here we use a latitudinal gradient spanning 3,000 km across Europe to examine bacterial and fungal communities in the rhizosphere and surrounding soils of range-expanding plant species. We selected range-expanding plants with and without congeneric native species in the new range and, as a control, the congeneric native species, totalling 382 plant individuals collected across Europe. In general, the status of a plant as a range-expanding plant was a weak predictor of the composition of bacterial and fungal communities. However, microbial communities of range-expanding plant species became more similar to each other further from their original range. Range-expanding plants that were unrelated to the native community also experienced a decrease in the ratio of plant pathogens to symbionts, giving weak support to the enemy release hypothesis. Even at a continental scale, the effects of plant range expansion on the belowground microbiome are detectable, although changes to specific taxa remain difficult to decipher.
Keywords
Taverne, SDG 13 - Climate Action
Citation
Ramirez, K S, Snoek, L B, Koorem, K, Geisen, S, Bloem, L J, Ten Hooven, F, Kostenko, O, Krigas, N, Manrubia, M, Caković, D, van Raaij, D, Tsiafouli, M A, Vreš, B, Čelik, T, Weser, C, Wilschut, R A & van der Putten, W H 2019, 'Range-expansion effects on the belowground plant microbiome', Nature Ecology and Evolution, vol. 3, no. 4, pp. 604-611. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41559-019-0828-z