Tolerance to land-use changes through natural modulations of the plant microbiome

Vincent Zieschank, Anne Muola, Stefan Janssen, Alexander Lach, Robert R Junker
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Abstract

Land-use changes threaten ecosystems and are a major driver of species loss. Plants may adapt or migrate to resist global change, but this can lag behind rapid anthropogenic changes to the environment. Our data show that natural modulations of the microbiome of grassland plants in response to experimental land-use change in a common garden directly affect plant phenotype and performance, thus increasing plant tolerance. In contrast, direct effects of fertilizer application and mowing on plant phenotypes were less strong. Land-use intensity-specific microbiomes caused clearly distinguishable plant phenotypes also in a laboratory experiment using gnotobiotic strawberry plants in absence of environmental variation. Therefore, natural modulations of the plant microbiome may be key to species persistence and ecosystem stability. We argue that a prerequisite for this microbiome-mediated tolerance is the availability of diverse local sources of microorganisms facilitating rapid modulations in response to change. Thus, conservation efforts must protect microbial diversity, which can help mitigate the effects of global change and facilitate environmental and human health.
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通过植物微生物群的自然调节对土地利用变化的耐受性
土地利用变化威胁着生态系统,是物种丧失的主要驱动因素。植物可能会适应或迁移以抵抗全球变化,但这可能落后于人类对环境的快速变化。我们的数据表明,在一个普通的花园中,草地植物的微生物组响应实验性土地利用变化的自然调节直接影响植物的表型和性能,从而提高植物的耐受性。相比之下,施肥和刈割对植株表型的直接影响较小。在没有环境变化的实验室实验中,土地利用强度特异性微生物组也引起了明显不同的植物表型。因此,植物微生物组的自然调节可能是物种持续存在和生态系统稳定的关键。我们认为,这种微生物组介导的耐受性的先决条件是多种本地微生物来源的可用性,以促进对变化的快速调节。因此,保护工作必须保护微生物多样性,这有助于减轻全球变化的影响,促进环境和人类健康。
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