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Soil microbes influence the ecology and evolution of plant plasticity. | LitMetric

Soil microbes influence the ecology and evolution of plant plasticity.

New Phytol

Department of Biology, The University of New Mexico, Castetter Hall, 219 Yale Blvd NE, Albuquerque, NM, 87131-0001, USA.

Published: January 2025

AI Article Synopsis

  • Stress in plants triggers changes in their traits, but it's unclear if these changes are direct responses to stress or influenced by shifts in soil microbial communities.
  • In an experiment involving plants grown under different stress conditions, it was found that only live microbial communities led to delayed flowering in stressed plants, a response that proved to be maladaptive.
  • The study indicates that microbes not only influence plant trait expression but also disrupt genetic correlations important for plant evolution, suggesting a significant role of soil microbes in shaping plant plasticity and evolution under stress.

Article Abstract

Stress often induces plant trait plasticity, and microbial communities also alter plant traits. Therefore, it is unclear how much plasticity results from direct plant responses to stress vs indirect responses due to stress-induced changes in soil microbial communities. To test how microbes and microbial community responses to stress affect the ecology and potentially the evolution of plant plasticity, I grew plants in four stress environments (salt, herbicide, herbivory, and no stress) with microbes that had responded to these same environments or with sterile inoculant. Plants delayed flowering under stress only when inoculated with live microbial communities, and this plasticity was maladaptive. However, microbial communities responded to stress in ways that accelerated flowering across all environments. Microbes also affected the expression of genetic variation for plant flowering time and specific leaf area, as well as genetic variation for plasticity of both traits, and disrupted a positive genetic correlation for plasticity in response to herbicide and herbivory stress, suggesting that microbes may affect the pace of plant evolution. Together, these results highlight an important role for soil microbes in plant plastic responses to stress and suggest that microbes may alter the evolution of plant plasticity.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/nph.20383DOI Listing

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