HOME > Publications > Articles > Article Abstracts

Article Abstract – Pahua et al. (2018)

Title:

Fitness variation among host species and the paradox of ineffective rhizobia.

Authors and affiliations:

V. J. Pahua1, P. J. N. Stokes2, A. C. Hollowell1, J. U. Regus1, K. A. Gano-Cohen1, C. E. Wendlandt2, K. W. Quides1, J. Y. Lyu1, and J. L. Sachs1,2,3

1Department of Evolution Ecology and Organismal Biology
2Department of Botany and Plant Sciences
3Institute for Integrative Genome Biology, University of California, Riverside

Citation:

J. Evol. Biol. doi:10.1111/jeb.13249 (2018)

Abstract:

Legumes can preferentially select beneficial rhizobial symbionts and sanction ineffective strains that fail to fix nitrogen. Yet paradoxically, rhizobial populations vary from highly beneficial to ineffective in natural and agricultural soils. Classic models of symbiosis focus on the single dimension of symbiont cost-benefit to sympatric hosts, but fail to explain the widespread persistence of ineffective rhizobia. Here, we test a novel framework predicting that spatio-temporal and community dynamics can maintain ineffective strains in rhizobial populations. We used clonal and multistrain inoculations and quantitative culturing to investigate the relative fitness of four focal Bradyrhizobium strains varying from effective to ineffective on Acmispon strigosus. We found that an ineffective Bradyrhizobium strain can be sanctioned by its native A. strigosus host across the host's range, forming fewer and smaller nodules compared to beneficial strains. But the same ineffective Bradyrhizobium strain exhibits a nearly opposite pattern on the broadly sympatric host Acmispon wrangelianus, forming large nodules in both clonal and multistrain inoculations. These data suggest that community-level effects could favour the persistence of ineffective rhizobia and contribute to variation in symbiotic nitrogen fixation.

Full text:

HTML | PDF (From Sachs lab)

© 2001-2018 Bernard Field Station Faculty Advisory Committee
Page last updated 18 May 2018 by Nancy Hamlett.