Department of Ecology and Evolution, Tulane University, New Orleans, LA 70118, USA.
Department of Ecology and Evolution, Tulane University, New Orleans, LA 70118, USA.
Sci Total Environ. 2018 Nov 15;642:904-913. doi: 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2018.06.077. Epub 2018 Jun 18.
The plant microbiome, composed of diverse interacting microorganisms, is thought to undergird host integrity and well-being. Though it is well understood that environmental perturbations like oil pollution can alter the diversity and composition of microbiomes, remarkably little is known about how disturbance alters plant-fungal associations. Using Next-Generation sequencing of the 18S rDNA internal transcribed spacer (ITS1) region, we examined outcomes of enduring oil exposure on aboveground leaf and belowground endophytic root and rhizosphere fungal communities of Spartina alterniflora, a highly valued ecosystem engineer in southeastern Louisiana marshes affected by the 2010 Deepwater Horizon accident. We found that aboveground foliar fungal communities exhibited site-dependent compositional turnover with consequent loss in diversity according to oiling history. Rhizosphere soil communities also exhibited shifts in community composition associated with oiling history, whereas root endophytic communities did not. Oiling did not increase or decrease similarities among aboveground and belowground communities within an individual host, indicating that host plant characteristics exert stronger control than external factors on fungal community composition. These results show that fungal community responses to oiling vary within tissues of the same host plant, and that differences in the local environment, or alternatively, site-specific differences in residual oil constrain the magnitude of exposure responses. Our study offers novel perspectives on how environmental contaminants and perturbations can influence plant microbiomes, highlighting the importance of assessing long-term ecological outcomes of oil pollution to better understand how shifts in microbial communities influence plant performance and ecosystem function. Our findings are relevant to coastal management programs tasked with responding to oil spills and increasing pressures arising from intensifying development and climate change. Understanding how modification of plant-microbiome associations influences plant performance, particularly of ecosystem engineers like S. alterniflora, can help guide efforts to protect and restore at-risk coastal ecosystems.
植物微生物组由多种相互作用的微生物组成,被认为是支撑宿主完整性和健康的基础。尽管人们已经充分认识到,像石油污染这样的环境干扰会改变微生物组的多样性和组成,但对于干扰如何改变植物-真菌的关系却知之甚少。本研究通过对 18S rDNA 内转录间隔区(ITS1)区域的下一代测序,研究了持久的石油暴露对路易斯安那州东南部湿地受 2010 年深水地平线事故影响的一种极具价值的生态系统工程师——互花米草的地上叶片和地下内生根及根际真菌群落的影响。研究发现,地上叶部真菌群落的组成随时间推移而发生了依赖于地点的变化,导致多样性随之丧失。根际土壤群落也表现出与石油污染历史相关的群落组成变化,而根内生真菌群落则没有。石油污染并没有增加或减少单个宿主内地上和地下群落之间的相似性,这表明宿主植物特征对真菌群落组成的控制作用强于外部因素。这些结果表明,真菌群落对石油污染的反应在同一宿主植物的不同组织内存在差异,并且局部环境的差异或残留石油的特定地点差异限制了暴露反应的程度。本研究为环境污染物和干扰如何影响植物微生物组提供了新的视角,强调了评估石油污染对长期生态后果的重要性,以更好地了解微生物群落的变化如何影响植物的性能和生态系统功能。本研究结果与沿海管理计划相关,该计划负责应对溢油事件,并应对由于开发和气候变化加剧而产生的日益增加的压力。了解植物-微生物群关联的改变如何影响植物的性能,特别是对互花米草等生态系统工程师的影响,有助于指导保护和恢复处于危险中的沿海生态系统的努力。