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vol.62 número2Hydrological response in a savanna hillslope under different rainfall regimesFungal community structure variability between the root rhizosphere and endosphere in a granite catena system in Kruger National Park, South Africa índice de autoresíndice de materiabúsqueda de artículos
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Koedoe

versión On-line ISSN 2071-0771
versión impresa ISSN 0075-6458

Resumen

VERMEULEN, Marcele; CASON, Errol D.  y  SWART, Wijnand J.. The rhizobiome of herbaceous plants in Clovelly and Sterkspruit soils of the Stevenson-Hamilton supersite. Koedoe [online]. 2020, vol.62, n.2, pp.1-9. ISSN 2071-0771.  http://dx.doi.org/10.4102/koedoe.v62i2.1596.

By attracting microorganisms from the surrounding soil via root exudates, the composition of microbial populations in the rhizosphere of plants is regulated and maintained according to the genotype of the plant and its abiotic soil environment. This project investigated the bacterial diversity of the rhizosphere microbiome (i.e. rhizobiome) of the three most common herbaceous plants (Kyphocarpa angustifolia [Amaranthaceae, Caryophyllales], Melhania acuminata [Malvaceae, Malvales] and Sida cordifolia [Malvacae, Malvales]) growing mutually in two different soil types (Clovelly [top] and Sterkspruit [bottom]) with differing abiotic characteristics at a granite catenal supersite in the Kruger National Park, South Africa. Two plant species (K. angustifolia and S. cordifolia) occurred at both the top and bottom sites, whilst M. acuminata only occurred at the top site. Ten rhizosphere samples were collected per plant from both the top and bottom sites, comprising a total of 50 samples. Biolog EcoPlates™ were used to assess differences in carbon source utilisation patterns by bacteria in the rhizobiome. For next-generation sequencing analysis, the DNA from four randomly selected rhizosphere soil samples from each plant species, at both the top and bottom sites, was combined to yield two samples from each locality for each species. Targeted metagenomic sequencing of the 16S rRNA gene region (V3 and V4 regions) was used to characterise the rhizobiome. Actinobacteria and Proteobacteria were the most dominant phyla in all rhizobiomes, and unique and shared operational taxonomic units were identified in all the rhizobiomes. Principal component analysis of the Biolog data revealed no disparity between the five rhizobiomes.CONSERVATION IMPLICATIONS: The results obtained in this study could play a role in micro-ecological scale conservation and management because microbial diversity in soils plays a vital role in shaping above-ground biodiversity and terrestrial ecosystem dynamics

Palabras clave : Kruger National Park; Microbiome; Rhizobiome; 16S diversity; Stevenson-Hamilton Supersite; Granite catena.

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