Microbe‐induced plant resistance against insect pests depends on timing of inoculation but is consistent across climatic conditions

Author:

Sanchez‐Mahecha Oriana1,Klink Sophia2,Rothballer Michael2,Sturm Sarah1,Weisser Wolfgang W.1ORCID,Zytynska Sharon3ORCID,Heinen Robin1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Terrestrial Ecology Research Group, Department for Life Science Systems, School of Life Sciences, Hans‐Carl‐von‐Carlowitz‐Platz Technical University of Munich Freising Germany

2. German Research Center for Environmental Health Institute of Network Biology Neuherberg Germany

3. Department of Evolution, Ecology, and Behaviour, Institute of Infection, Veterinary and Ecological Sciences University of Liverpool Liverpool UK

Abstract

Abstract To cope with abiotic and biotic stressors, plants have developed mutualistic associations with beneficial soil microbes, but little is known about how extreme abiotic conditions impact on microbe‐induce resistance to insect herbivores. Extreme temperatures are often accompanied by extremes in plant water availability, which together reduce plant growth and change plant physiology. There are potential consequences for increasing plant susceptibility to biotic stresses, and this poses a real challenge for plant productivity. We evaluated how the effects of beneficial soil bacteria (Acidovorax radicis N35e) on barley plant growth and resultant resistance against aphid infestation (Sitobion avenae) were impacted by a single heatwave event across a plant water availability gradient. We also tested if timing of bacterial inoculation (before or after the temperature treatment) affected bacteria‐plant interactions on aphids. We found that heatwaves affected plant biomass allocation from above‐ground to below‐ground tissues. Inoculation with A. radicis led to reduction of aphid numbers, but depended on timing of inoculation, and led to stronger resistance when inoculations occurred closer to aphid infestation. Remarkably, microbe‐induced resistance against aphids was consistent across heatwave and water availability treatments. This study provides evidence that beneficial plant‐bacteria interactions may represent a potential solution for sustainable agricultural practices to enhance plant growth and response to insect pests under climate change. Future field trials should investigate the consistency of beneficial effects reported here for a better understanding of multispecies interactions in the context of global change. Read the free Plain Language Summary for this article on the Journal blog.

Funder

Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft

Publisher

Wiley

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