Stress tolerance in plants via habitat-adapted symbiosis
United States Geological Survey · University of Washington · +1 more institution
Abstract
We demonstrate that native grass species from coastal and geothermal habitats require symbiotic fungal endophytes for salt and heat tolerance, respectively. Symbiotically conferred stress tolerance is a habitat-specific phenomenon with geothermal endophytes conferring heat but not salt tolerance, and coastal endophytes conferring salt but not heat tolerance. The same fungal species isolated from plants in habitats devoid of salt or heat stress did not confer these stress tolerances. Moreover, fungal endophytes from agricultural crops conferred disease resistance and not salt or heat tolerance. We define habitat-specific, symbiotically-conferred stress tolerance as habitat-adapted symbiosis and hypothesize that…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 39.08
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 58
Authors
8- RJRusty J. RodriguezCorresponding
United States Geological Survey, University of Washington
- JMJoan M. Henson
Montana State University
- EVElizabeth Van Volkenburgh
University of Washington
- MSMarshal S. Hoy
United States Geological Survey, University of Washington
- LWLeesa Wright
University of Washington, Montana State University
Topics & keywords
- Biology
- Habitat
- Abiotic component
- Abiotic stress
- Endophyte
- Drought tolerance
- Symbiosis
- Ecology