Rhizosphere shapes the associations between protistan predators and bacteria within microbiomes through the deterministic selection on bacterial communities

Author:

Yue Yang1,Liu Chen1,Xu Boting1,Wang Yijin1,Lv Qihui1,Zhou Zeyuan1,Li Rong1,Kowalchuk George A.2,Jousset Alexandre12,Shen Qirong1,Xiong Wu1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Key Lab of Organic‐Based Fertilizers of China, Jiangsu Provincial Key Lab for Solid Organic Waste Utilization Nanjing Agricultural University Nanjing China

2. Ecology and Biodiversity Group, Department of Biology, Institute of Environmental Biology Utrecht University Utrecht The Netherlands

Abstract

AbstractThe assembly of bacterial communities in the rhizosphere is well‐documented and plays a crucial role in supporting plant performance. However, we have limited knowledge of how plant rhizosphere determines the assembly of protistan predators and whether the potential associations between protistan predators and bacterial communities shift due to rhizosphere selection. To address this, we examined bacterial and protistan taxa from 443 agricultural soil samples including bulk and rhizosphere soils. Our results presented distinct patterns of bacteria and protistan predators in rhizosphere microbiome assembly. Community assembly of protistan predators was determined by a stochastic process in the rhizosphere and the diversity of protistan predators was reduced in the rhizosphere compared to bulk soils, these may be attributed to the indirect impacts from the altered bacterial communities that showed deterministic process assembly in the rhizosphere. Interestingly, we observed that the plant rhizosphere facilitates more close interrelationships between protistan predators and bacterial communities, which might promote a healthy rhizosphere microbial community for plant growth. Overall, our findings indicate that the potential predator–prey relationships within the microbiome, mediated by plant rhizosphere, might contribute to plant performance in agricultural ecosystems.

Funder

Fundamental Research Funds for the Central Universities

National Natural Science Foundation of China

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics,Microbiology

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