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  4. Effects of Sphagnum Leachate on Competitive Sphagnum Microbiome Depend on Species and Time
 
research article

Effects of Sphagnum Leachate on Competitive Sphagnum Microbiome Depend on Species and Time

Hamard, Samuel  
•
Robroek, Bjorn J. M.  
•
Allard, Pierre-Marie
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September 6, 2019
Frontiers In Microbiology

Plant specialized metabolites play an important role in soil carbon (C) and nutrient fluxes. Through anti-microbial effects, they can modulate microbial assemblages and associated microbial-driven processes, such as nutrient cycling, so to positively or negatively cascade on plant fitness. As such, plant specialized metabolites can be used as a tool to supplant competitors. These compounds are little studied in bryophytes. This is especially notable in peatlands where Sphagnum mosses can dominate the vegetation and show strong interspecific competition. Sphagnum mosses form carpets where diverse microbial communities live and play a crucial role in Sphagnum fitness by regulating C and nutrient cycling. Here, by means of a microcosm experiment, we assessed to what extent moss metabolites of two Sphagnum species (S. fallax and S. divinum) modulate the competitive Sphagnum microbiome, with particular focus on microbial respiration. Using a reciprocal leachate experiment, we found that interactions between Sphagnum leachates and microbiome are species-specific. We show that both Sphagnum leachates differed in compound richness and compound relative abundance, especially sphagnum acid derivates, and that they include microbial-related metabolites. The addition of S. divinum leachate on the S. fallax microbiome immediately reduced microbial respiration (-95%). Prolonged exposition of S. fallax microbiome to S. divinum leachate destabilized the food web structure due to a modulation of microbial abundance. In particular, leachate addition decreased the biomass of testate amoebae and rotifers but increased that of ciliates. These changes did not influence microbial CO2 respiration, suggesting that the structural plasticity of the food web leads to its functional resistance through the replacement of species that are functionally redundant. In contrast, S. fallax leachate neither affected S. divinum microbial respiration, nor microbial biomass. We, however, found that S. fallax leachate addition stabilized the food web structure associated to S. divinum by changing trophic interactions among species. The differences in allelopathic effects between both Sphagnum leachates might impact their competitiveness and affect species distribution at local scale. Our study further paves the way to better understand the role of moss and microbial specialized metabolites in peatland C dynamics.

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Type
research article
DOI
10.3389/fmicb.2019.02042
Web of Science ID

WOS:000484516700001

Author(s)
Hamard, Samuel  
Robroek, Bjorn J. M.  
Allard, Pierre-Marie
Signarbieux, Constant  
Zhou, Shuaizhen
Saesong, Tongchai
de Baaker, Flore
Buttler, Alexandre  
Chiapusio, Genevieve
Wolfender, Jean-Luc
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Date Issued

2019-09-06

Published in
Frontiers In Microbiology
Volume

10

Article Number

2042

Subjects

Microbiology

•

Microbiology

•

allelopathy and allelochemicals

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metabolomics

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microbial networks

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microbial respiration and biomass

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peatland

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plant competition

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plant-exudates

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soil food-web

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vertical microdistribution

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secondary compounds

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mass-spectrometry

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testate amebas

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soil

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communities

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peatland

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dynamics

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carbon

•

acid

Note

This is an open access article under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License

Editorial or Peer reviewed

REVIEWED

Written at

EPFL

EPFL units
ECOS  
Available on Infoscience
September 19, 2019
Use this identifier to reference this record
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/161286
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