Seasonal assembly of nectar microbial communities across angiosperm
plant species: assessing contributions of climate and plant traits
- Jacob Cecala,
- Leta Landucci,
- Rachel Vannette
Abstract
Plant-microbe associations are ubiquitous, but parsing the contributions
of dispersal, host filtering, competition, and the environment on
microbial community composition is challenging. Floral nectar-inhabiting
microbes offer a tractable system to disentangle community assembly
processes. We inoculated a synthetic community of yeasts and bacteria
into nectars of 31 phylogenetically diverse plant species while
excluding pollinators. We monitored weather conditions and, after 24
hours, collected and cultured communities. We found a strong signature
of plant species on resulting microbial abundance and community
composition, in part explained by plant phylogeny and nectar peroxide
content, but not measured floral morphological traits. Higher maximum
and minimum temperatures increased microbial growth overall and favored
certain microbes over others. Our work supports the roles of plant
identity and abiotic conditions in assembly and growth of
plant-associated microbial communities and finds evidence for
diversity-productivity relationships within plant-associated
microbiomes.Submitted to Ecology Letters Assigned to Editor
Submission Checks Completed
Reviewer(s) Assigned
25 Jun 2024Review(s) Completed, Editorial Evaluation Pending
16 Aug 2024Editorial Decision: Revise Major
17 Sep 2024Review(s) Completed, Editorial Evaluation Pending
17 Sep 20241st Revision Received
19 Sep 2024Assigned to Editor
19 Sep 2024Submission Checks Completed
23 Sep 2024Reviewer(s) Assigned
04 Nov 2024Editorial Decision: Revise Minor
07 Nov 20242nd Revision Received
07 Nov 2024Review(s) Completed, Editorial Evaluation Pending
08 Nov 2024Submission Checks Completed
08 Nov 2024Assigned to Editor
08 Nov 2024Reviewer(s) Assigned
19 Nov 2024Editorial Decision: Accept