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The abundant fraction of soil microbiomes regulates the rhizosphere function in crop wild progenitors.

Miguel de CelisMaría José Fernández-AlonsoIgnacio BeldaCarlos GarcíaRaul Ochoa-HuesoJavier PalominoBrajesh K SinghYue YinJun-Tao WangLuis Abdala-RobertsFernando D AlfaroDiego Angulo-PérezManoj-Kumar ArthikalaJason CorwinGui-Lan DuanAntonio Hernandez-LopezKalpana NanjareddyBabak PasariTeresa Quijano-MedinaDaniela S RiveraSalar ShaafPankaj TrivediQingwen YangEli ZaadyYong-Guan ZhuManuel Delgado-BaquerizoRubén MillaPablo García-Palacios
Published in: Ecology letters (2024)
The rhizosphere influence on the soil microbiome and function of crop wild progenitors (CWPs) remains virtually unknown, despite its relevance to develop microbiome-oriented tools in sustainable agriculture. Here, we quantified the rhizosphere influence-a comparison between rhizosphere and bulk soil samples-on bacterial, fungal, protists and invertebrate communities and on soil multifunctionality across nine CWPs at their sites of origin. Overall, rhizosphere influence was higher for abundant taxa across the four microbial groups and had a positive influence on rhizosphere soil organic C and nutrient contents compared to bulk soils. The rhizosphere influence on abundant soil microbiomes was more important for soil multifunctionality than rare taxa and environmental conditions. Our results are a starting point towards the use of CWPs for rhizosphere engineering in modern crops.
Keyphrases
  • plant growth
  • microbial community
  • climate change
  • life cycle