Microbial Interactions in the Phyllosphere Increase Plant Performance under Herbivore Biotic Stress.

Front Microbiol

Department of Biological Sciences, University of Pittsburgh, PittsburghPA, USA; Department of Biology, Berea College, BereaKY, USA.

Published: January 2017

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study explores how diverse bacteria in the phyllosphere (the plant surface ecosystem) affect plant growth and survival, particularly in the presence of herbivores.
  • Results showed that plants performed better with pathogenic bacteria compared to beneficial ones, suggesting that the presence of natural enemies helps plants develop defenses against each other.
  • While bacterial species richness improved seed production, combining different bacterial species negatively impacted their effectiveness, indicating complex interactions among them.

Article Abstract

The phyllosphere supports a tremendous diversity of microbes and other organisms. However, little is known about the colonization and survival of pathogenic and beneficial bacteria alone or together in the phyllosphere across the whole plant life-cycle under herbivory, which hinders our ability to understand the role of phyllosphere bacteria on plant performance. We addressed these questions in experiments using four genetically and biogeographically diverse accessions of , three ecologically important bacterial strains ( DC3000, , both pathogens, and , plant beneficial) under common garden conditions that included fungus gnats ( spp.). Plants supported greater abundance of over either pathogenic strain in the phyllosphere under such greenhouse conditions. However, the Arabidopsis accessions performed much better (i.e., early flowering, biomass, siliques, and seeds per plant) in the presence of pathogenic bacteria rather than in the presence of the plant beneficial . As a group, the plants inoculated with any of the three bacteria (, or ) all had a higher fitness than uninoculated controls under these conditions. These results suggest that the plants grown under the pressure of different natural enemies, such as pathogens and an herbivore together perform relatively better, probably because natural enemies induce host defense against each other. However, in general, a positive impact of on plant performance under herbivory may be due to its plant-beneficial properties. In contrast, bacterial species in the mixture (all three together) performed poorer than as monocultures in their total abundance and host plant growth promotion, possibly due to negative interspecific interactions among the bacteria. However, bacterial species richness linearly promoted seed production in the host plants under these conditions, suggesting that natural enemies diversity may be beneficial from the host perspective. Collectively, these results highlight the importance of bacterial community composition on plant performance and bacterial abundance in the phyllosphere.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5247453PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fmicb.2017.00041DOI Listing

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