Wheat rhizosphere harbors a less complex and more stable microbial co-occurrence pattern than bulk soil
Wheat rhizosphere harbors a less complex and more stable microbial co-occurrence pattern than bulk soil
Date
2018-07-25
Authors
Fan, Kunkun
Weisenhorn, Pamela B.
Gilbert, Jack A.
Chu, Haiyan
Weisenhorn, Pamela B.
Gilbert, Jack A.
Chu, Haiyan
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Keywords
Co-occurrence pattern
Rhizosphere microbes
Network structure
Keystone species
Rhizosphere microbes
Network structure
Keystone species
Abstract
The rhizosphere harbors complex microbial communities, whose dynamic associations
are considered critical for plant growth and health but remain poorly understood. We
constructed co-occurrence networks for archaeal, bacterial and fungal communities
associated with the rhizosphere and bulk soil of wheat fields on the North China Plain.
Rhizosphere co-occurrence networks had fewer nodes, edges, modules and lower
density, but maintained more robust structure compared with bulk soil, suggesting that
a less complex topology and more stable co-occurrence pattern is a feature for wheat
rhizosphere. Bacterial and fungal communities followed a power-law distribution,
while the archaeal community did not. Soil pH and microbial diversity were
significantly correlated with network size and connectivity in both rhizosphere and bulk
soils. Keystone species that played essential roles in network structure were predicted
to maintain a flexible generalist metabolism, and had fewer significant correlations with
environmental variables, especially in the rhizosphere. These results indicate that
distinct microbial co-occurrence patterns exist in wheat rhizosphere, which could be
associated with variable agricultural ecosystem properties.
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© The Author(s), 2018. This is the author's version of the work and is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License. The definitive version was published in Soil Biology and Biochemistry 125 (2018): 251-260, doi:10.1016/j.soilbio.2018.07.022.