Home‐based microbial solution to boost crop growth in low‐fertility soil

Author:

Jiang Meitong12ORCID,Delgado‐Baquerizo Manuel34ORCID,Yuan Mengting Maggie5ORCID,Ding Jixian12,Yergeau Etienne6ORCID,Zhou Jizhong7ORCID,Crowther Thomas W.8ORCID,Liang Yuting12ORCID

Affiliation:

1. State Key Laboratory of Soil and Sustainable Agriculture, Institute of Soil Science Chinese Academy of Sciences Nanjing 210000 China

2. University of Chinese Academy of Sciences Beijing 100049 China

3. Laboratorio de Biodiversidad y Funcionamiento Ecosistémico Instituto de Recursos Naturales y Agrobiología de Sevilla (IRNAS), CSIC Ave Reina Mercedes 10 E‐41012 Sevilla Spain

4. Unidad Asociada CSIC‐UPO (BioFun) Universidad Pablo de Olavide 41013 Sevilla Spain

5. Department of Environmental Science, Policy and Management University of California Berkeley CA 94720 USA

6. Centre Armand‐Frappier Santé Biotechnologie Institut national de la recherche scientifique Laval H7V 1B7 Québec Canada

7. Department of Microbiology and Plant Biology, Institute for Environmental Genomics University of Oklahoma Norman OK 73019 USA

8. Department of Environmental Systems Science, Institute of Integrative Biology ETH Zurich Zurich 8092 Switzerland

Abstract

Summary Soil microbial inoculants are expected to boost crop productivity under climate change and soil degradation. However, the efficiency of native vs commercialized microbial inoculants in soils with different fertility and impacts on resident microbial communities remain unclear. We investigated the differential plant growth responses to native synthetic microbial community (SynCom) and commercial plant growth‐promoting rhizobacteria (PGPR). We quantified the microbial colonization and dynamic of niche structure to emphasize the home‐field advantages for native microbial inoculants. A native SynCom of 21 bacterial strains, originating from three typical agricultural soils, conferred a special advantage in promoting maize growth under low‐fertility conditions. The root : shoot ratio of fresh weight increased by 78–121% with SynCom but only 23–86% with PGPRs. This phenotype correlated with the potential robust colonization of SynCom and positive interactions with the resident community. Niche breadth analysis revealed that SynCom inoculation induced a neutral disturbance to the niche structure. However, even PGPRs failed to colonize the natural soil, they decreased niche breadth and increased niche overlap by 59.2–62.4%, exacerbating competition. These results suggest that the home‐field advantage of native microbes may serve as a basis for engineering crop microbiomes to support food production in widely distributed poor soils.

Funder

National Natural Science Foundation of China

Youth Innovation Promotion Association of the Chinese Academy of Sciences

Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovación

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Plant Science,Physiology

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