Population-level variation in host plant response to multiple microbial mutualists.

Am J Bot

Department of Integrative Biology, University of Guelph, Guelph, Ontario, N1G 2W1, Canada.

Published: October 2020

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study examines how different populations of the legume Medicago truncatula respond to two mutualistic microbes: arbuscular mycorrhizal (AM) fungi and rhizobia bacteria.
  • Despite expectations of synergistic effects benefiting plant growth, results show that while plants grew better with both microbes, the response to AM fungi was significantly stronger than to rhizobia, with no synergistic benefits observed.
  • The findings suggest that the mutualistic relationships with each microbe evolved independently, indicated by varying plant responses to AM fungi and consistent responses to rhizobia across different plant populations.

Article Abstract

Premise: Multipartite mutualisms are widespread in nature, but population-level variation in these interactions is rarely quantified. In the model multipartite mutualism between legumes, arbuscular mycorrhizal (AM) fungi and rhizobia bacteria, host responses to microbial partners are expected to be synergistic because the nutrients provided by each microbe colimit plant growth, but tests of this prediction have not been done in multiple host populations.

Methods: To test whether plant response to associations with AM fungi and rhizobia varies among host populations and whether synergistic responses to microbial mutualists are common, we grew 34 Medicago truncatula populations in a factorial experiment that manipulated the presence or absence of each mutualist.

Results: Plant growth increased in response to each mutualist, but there were no synergistic effects. Instead, plant response to inoculation with AM fungi was an order of magnitude higher than with rhizobia. Plant response to AM fungi varied among populations, whereas responses to rhizobia were relatively uniform. There was a positive correlation between plant host response to each mutualist but no correlation between AM fungal colonization and rhizobia nodulation of plant roots.

Conclusions: The greater population divergence in host response to AM fungi relative to rhizobia, weak correlation in host response to each microbial mutualist, and the absence of a correlation between measures of AM fungal and rhizobia performance suggests that each plant-microbe mutualism evolved independently among M. truncatula populations.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/ajb2.1543DOI Listing

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