Root Exudates Regulate Soil Fungal Community Composition and Diversity
Colorado State University · University of Chicago · +1 more institution
Abstract
Plants are in constant contact with a community of soil biota that contains fungi ranging from pathogenic to symbiotic. A few studies have demonstrated a critical role of chemical communication in establishing highly specialized relationships, but the general role for root exudates in structuring the soil fungal community is poorly described. This study demonstrates that two model plant species (Arabidopsis thaliana and Medicago truncatula) are able to maintain resident soil fungal populations but unable to maintain nonresident soil fungal populations. This is mediated largely through root exudates: the effects of adding in vitro-generated root exudates to the soil fungal community were qualitatively and…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 20.25
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 38
Authors
5Topics & keywords
- Biology
- Microbial population biology
- Biomass (ecology)
- Botany
- Phylotype
- Population
- Exudate
- Medicago truncatula
- Life in Land