Molecular defense responses to natural enemies determine seedling
survival in a subtropical forest
Abstract
Negative density dependence (NDD) has been accepted as a key mechanism
for biodiversity maintenance in natural forests and different lineages
of natural enemies (fungus, bacterium, insect and virus) may be
involved. Previous NDD related studies usually correlated seedling
survival to the density of host-specific pests or pathogens along the
distance to conspecific neighbors, and molecular defense responses of
focal seedlings to natural enemies were seldomly concerned. By employing
community functional genomics strategy, we extracted copy numbers of
homologous genes in defense responses from transcriptomic data of 99
tree species and their inherent impacts on seedling survival were
evaluated using partial linear regression analysis and general linear
mixed-effects models. The community-level transcriptomic gene copy
number of defense responses to fungus, insect and virus showed
significant negative correlations with survival rates of the seedling
community and the species-level gene copy number of defense response to
insect significantly correlated with survival rates of top-twenty common
seedling species. Moreover, presence of adult neighbors with distinct
defense response to bacterial and viral pathogens survival of focal
seedlings as predicted by NDD, while presence of seedling neighbors with
similar defense response to insect tended to promote survival of focal
seedlings which may be driven by insect-mediated biotic filtering or
competitive exclusion. We conclude that both gene copy number and
dissimilarities to adult and seedling neighbors in defense response to
natural enemies determined seedling survival, indicating the critical
contributions of molecular defense responses of plants to species
coexistence and diversity maintenance in subtropical forests.