Interactions between Bacterial Inoculants and Native Soil Bacterial Community: the Case of Spore-formingBacillusspp.

Author:

Mawarda Panji Cahya12ORCID,Mallon Cyrus A1,Le Roux Xavier3,van Elsas Jan Dirk1,Salles Joana Falcão1

Affiliation:

1. Microbial Community Ecology Cluster, expertise group GREEN, Groningen Institute of Evolutionary Life Sciences (GELIFES), University of Groningen , Nijenborgh 7, 9747 AG, Groningen, The Netherlands

2. Research Center for Environment and Clean Technology, National Research and Innovation Agency Republic of Indonesia (BRIN), Komplek LIPI , Jalan Sangkuriang No 21, Bandung 40135, Indonesia

3. INRAE, CNRS, Université Lyon 1, Université de Lyon, VetAgroSup, Laboratoire d'Ecologie Microbienne LEM , UMR 1418 INRAE, UMR 5557 CNRS, 69622 Villeurbanne Cedex, France

Abstract

AbstractMicrobial diversity can restrict the invasion and impact of alien microbes into soils via resource competition. However, this theory has not been tested on various microbial invaders with different ecological traits, particularly spore-forming bacteria. Here we investigated the survival capacity of two introduced spore-forming bacteria, Bacillus mycoides (BM) and B. pumillus (BP) and their impact on the soil microbiome niches with low and high diversity. We hypothesized that higher soil bacterial diversity would better restrict Bacillus survival via resource competition, and the invasion would alter the resident bacterial communities’ niches only if inoculants do not escape competition with the soil community (e.g. through sporulation). Our findings showed that BP could not survive as viable propagules and transiently impacted the bacterial communities’ niche structure. This may be linked to its poor resource usage and low growth rate. Having better resource use capacities, BM better survived in soil, though its survival was weakly related to the remaining resources left for them by the soil community. BM strongly affected the community niche structure, ultimately in less diverse communities. These findings show that the inverse diversity-invasibility relationship can be valid for some spore-forming bacteria, but only when they have sufficient resource use capacity.

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology,Ecology,Microbiology

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