Affiliation:
1. Department of Plant Pathology Washington State University Pullman Washington USA
2. Department of Microbiology University of Washington Seattle Washington USA
Abstract
AbstractHerbarium specimens are increasingly being used as sources of information to understand the ecology and evolution of plants and their associated microbes. Most studies have used specimens as a source of genetic material using culture‐independent approaches. We demonstrate that herbarium specimens can also be used to culture nodule‐associated bacteria, opening the possibility of using specimens to understand plant–microbe interactions at new spatiotemporal scales. We used historic and contemporary nodules of a common legume, Medicago lupulina, to create a culture collection. We were able to recover historic bacteria in 15 genera from three specimens (collected in 1950, 2004, and 2015). This work is the first of its kind to isolate historic bacteria from herbarium specimens. Future work should include inoculating plants with historic strains to see if they produce nodules and if they affect plant phenotype and fitness. Although we were unable to recover any Ensifer, the main symbiont of Medicago lupulina, we recovered some other potential nodulating species, as well as many putative growth‐promoting bacteria.
Funder
Directorate for Biological Sciences