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Wild legumes maintain beneficial soil rhizobia populations despite decades of nitrogen deposition

Authors :
Camille E. Wendlandt
Kelsey A. Gano-Cohen
Peter J. N. Stokes
Basava N. R. Jonnala
Avissa J. Zomorrodian
Khadija Al-Moussawi
Joel L. Sachs
Source :
Oecologia, vol 198, iss 2
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 2022.

Abstract

Natural landscapes are increasingly impacted by nitrogen enrichment from aquatic and airborne pollution sources. Nitrogen enrichment in the environment can eliminate the net benefits that plants gain from nitrogen-fixing microbes such as rhizobia, potentially altering host-mediated selection on nitrogen fixation. However, we know little about the long-term effects of nitrogen enrichment on this critical microbial service. Here, we sampled populations of the legume Acmispon strigosus and its associated soil microbial communities from sites spanning an anthropogenic nitrogen deposition gradient. We measured the net growth benefits plants obtained from their local soil microbial communities and quantified plant investment into nodules that house nitrogen-fixing rhizobia. We found that plant growth benefits from sympatric soil microbes did not vary in response to local soil nitrogen levels, and instead varied mainly among plant lines. Soil nitrogen levels positively predicted the number of nodules formed on sympatric plant hosts, although this was likely due to plant genotypic variation in nodule formation, rather than variation among soil microbial communities. The capacity of all the tested soil microbial communities to improve plant growth is consistent with plant populations imposing strong selection on rhizobial nitrogen fixation despite elevated soil nitrogen levels, suggesting that host control traits in A. strigosus are stable under long-term nutrient enrichment.

Details

ISSN :
14321939 and 00298549
Volume :
198
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Oecologia
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....d64fe27c1dd42bde30f5f25be00fcade
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00442-022-05116-9