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Soil pathogen communities associated with native and non‐native Phragmites australis populations in freshwater wetlands

机译:与淡水湿地中本地和非本地芦苇种群相关的土壤病原体群落

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SummarySoil pathogens are believed to be major contributors to negative plant–soil feedbacks that regulate plant community dynamics and plant invasions. While the theoretical basis for pathogen regulation of plant communities is well established within the plant–soil feedback framework, direct experimental evidence for pathogen community responses to plants has been limited, often relying largely on indirect evidence based on above-ground plant responses. As a result, specific soil pathogen responses accompanying above-ground plant community dynamics are largely unknown. Here, we examine the oomycete pathogens in soils conditioned by established populations of native noninvasive and non-native invasive haplotypes of Phragmites australis (European common reed). Our aim was to assess whether populations of invasive plants harbor unique communities of pathogens that differ from those associated with noninvasive populations and whether the distribution of taxa within these communities may help to explain invasive success. We compared the composition and abundance of pathogenic and saprobic oomycete species over a 2-year period. Despite a diversity of oomycete taxa detected in soils from both native and non-native populations, pathogen communities from both invaded and noninvaded soils were dominated by species of Pythium. Pathogen species that contributed the most to the differences observed between invaded and noninvaded soils were distributed between invaded and noninvaded soils. However, the specific taxa in invaded soils responsible for community differences were distinct from those in noninvaded soils that contributed to community differences. Our results indicate that, despite the phylogenetic relatedness of native and non-native P. australis haplotypes, pathogen communities associated with the dominant non-native haplotype are distinct from those of the rare native haplotype. Pathogen taxa that dominate either noninvaded or invaded soils suggest different potential mechanisms of invasion facilitation. These findings are consistent with the hypothesis that non-native plant species that dominate landscapes may “cultivate” a different soil pathogen community to their rhizosphere than those of rarer native species.
机译:总结土壤病原体被认为是负面的植物-土壤反馈的主要贡献者,这些反馈调节着植物群落的动态和植物的入侵。虽然在植物-土壤反馈框架内已建立了植物群落病原体调控的理论基础,但有关病原体群落对植物反应的直接实验证据却很有限,通常主要依靠基于地上植物反应的间接证据。结果,伴随着地上植物群落动态的特定土壤病原体反应在很大程度上是未知的。在这里,我们研究了由芦苇(欧洲共同芦苇)的本地非侵入性和非本地侵入性单倍型的既定种群所调节的土壤中的卵菌病原体。我们的目的是评估入侵植物种群是否具有不同于非入侵种群的独特病原体群落,以及这些群落中的分类群分布是否可能有助于解释入侵成功。我们比较了2年内致病和腐生卵菌种的组成和丰度。尽管在原生和非原生种群的土壤中都发现了卵菌类的多样性,但腐霉属仍占入侵和非入侵土壤的病原体群落的大部分。造成入侵土壤和非入侵土壤差异最大的病原菌物种分布在入侵土壤和非入侵土壤之间。但是,造成群落差异的入侵土壤中的特定分类群不同于造成群落差异的非入侵土壤中的特定分类群。我们的研究结果表明,尽管原生和非原生单倍体单倍体在系统发育上具有相关性,但与优势非原生单倍型相关的病原体群落却与罕见的原生单倍体不同。不论是非入侵土壤还是入侵土壤,病原体分类均表明不同的潜在入侵促进机制。这些发现与以下假设是一致的:支配景观的非本地植物物种可能会向其根际“培养”与稀有本地物种不同的土壤病原体群落。

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