Microbes can promote beneficial plant and animal responses to abiotic environments, but the ecological drivers of this benefit remain elusive. Here we investigated byproduct benefits, which occur when traits that increase the fitness of one species provide incidental benefits to another species with no direct cost to the provider species. In experimental mesocosms, microbial traits predicted plant responses to soil moisture such that bacteria with self-beneficial traits in drought increased plant early growth, size at reproduction, and chlorophyll concentration under drought, while bacteria with self-beneficial traits in well-watered environments increased these same plant traits in well-watered environments. Thus, microbial traits that promote microbial success in different soil moisture environments also promote plant success in these same environments. Our results show that the concept of byproduct benefits, originally conceived to explain the evolution of cooperation in pairwise mutualisms, also applies to interactions between plants and non-symbiotic soil microbes. Descriptions of the data can be found in the README_Bolin_Lennon_Lau_2022.txt file.
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Soil moisture incidentally selects for microbes that facilitate locally adaptive plant response
While a plant's microbiome can facilitate adaptive phenotypes, the plant's role in selecting for these microbes is unclear. Do plants actively recruit microbes beneficial to their current environment, or are beneficial microbes only an incidental by-product of microbial adaptation? We addressed these questions through a multigeneration greenhouse experiment, selecting for either dry- or wet-adapted soil microbial communities, either with or without plants. After three plant generations, we conducted a full reciprocal transplant of each soil community onto wet- and dry-treated plants. We found that plants generally benefited from soil microbes, and this benefit was greater whenever their current watering conditions matched the microbes' historical watering conditions. Principally, the plant's presence was not necessary in the historical treatments for this environmental matching benefit to emerge. Moreover, we found microbes from droughted soils could better tolerate drought stress. Taken together, these results suggest that the moisture environment selects for microbes that benefit plants under those specific moisture conditions, and that these beneficial properties arise as a by-product of microbial adaptation to the watering environment and not as a co-adapting plant–microbe system. This work highlights that understanding the selective agents on these plant-associated microbes will lead to a better understanding of plant adaptation.
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- Award ID(s):
- 2022049
- PAR ID:
- 10507561
- Publisher / Repository:
- The Royal Society
- Date Published:
- Journal Name:
- Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences
- Volume:
- 290
- Issue:
- 2001
- ISSN:
- 0962-8452
- Format(s):
- Medium: X
- Sponsoring Org:
- National Science Foundation
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