Rare bacterial subcommunity drives nutrient cycling in phyllosphere habitat of evergreen conifers

ABSTRACT Phyllosphere bacteria are crucial for pathogen resistance, stress tolerance, and productivity maintenance of host plants and further have potential effects on ecosystem functions. However, whether and how assembly patterns of both abundant and rare subcommunities changed across needle age c...

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Main Authors: Bing Li, Mingyang Fu, Guangze Jin, Zhili Liu
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: American Society for Microbiology 2025-08-01
Series:Microbiology Spectrum
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Online Access:https://journals.asm.org/doi/10.1128/spectrum.00518-25
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author Bing Li
Mingyang Fu
Guangze Jin
Zhili Liu
author_facet Bing Li
Mingyang Fu
Guangze Jin
Zhili Liu
author_sort Bing Li
collection DOAJ
description ABSTRACT Phyllosphere bacteria are crucial for pathogen resistance, stress tolerance, and productivity maintenance of host plants and further have potential effects on ecosystem functions. However, whether and how assembly patterns of both abundant and rare subcommunities changed across needle age cohorts, and their relative contributions to nutrient cycling in phyllosphere habitat of evergreen conifers are still unclear. Here, we examined both phyllosphere abundant and rare bacterial subcommunities in three needle age cohorts of the representative evergreen conifers in mixed broadleaved-Korean pine forests throughout Northeast China. We found that dispersal limitation and ecological drift dominated abundant and rare subcommunities, respectively. Deterministic assembly gradually increased with needle aging, which was mainly attributed to the increased needle chemical defense traits such as flavonoids. We further showed that multiple nutrient cycling in phyllosphere habitat was regulated by the rare subcommunity, closely related to the variations in diversity and composition. Collectively, our findings facilitate us in clarifying the mechanisms underlying the formation and succession of phyllosphere bacterial subcommunities across needle age cohorts and emphasize the vital role of rare subcommunities in promoting ecosystem functions.IMPORTANCEHost-associated microbial communities are critical for host health. However, the relative importance of abundant and rare subcommunities in driving nutrient cycling in phyllosphere habitat across needle age cohorts of evergreen conifers remains unknown. Here, we showed the different assembly mechanisms of abundant and rare subcommunities and emphasized the ecological role of rare subcommunities in promoting ecosystem functions. This is useful for understanding the formation and succession dynamics of plant microbiome to advance future applications with microbial agents to sustainable productivity and reduce diseases.
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spelling doaj-art-9e369ba32e8b490c861c2d8a68ad3be62025-08-20T03:44:01ZengAmerican Society for MicrobiologyMicrobiology Spectrum2165-04972025-08-0113810.1128/spectrum.00518-25Rare bacterial subcommunity drives nutrient cycling in phyllosphere habitat of evergreen conifersBing Li0Mingyang Fu1Guangze Jin2Zhili Liu3School of Ecology, Northeast Forestry University, Harbin, ChinaSchool of Ecology, Northeast Forestry University, Harbin, ChinaSchool of Ecology, Northeast Forestry University, Harbin, ChinaSchool of Ecology, Northeast Forestry University, Harbin, ChinaABSTRACT Phyllosphere bacteria are crucial for pathogen resistance, stress tolerance, and productivity maintenance of host plants and further have potential effects on ecosystem functions. However, whether and how assembly patterns of both abundant and rare subcommunities changed across needle age cohorts, and their relative contributions to nutrient cycling in phyllosphere habitat of evergreen conifers are still unclear. Here, we examined both phyllosphere abundant and rare bacterial subcommunities in three needle age cohorts of the representative evergreen conifers in mixed broadleaved-Korean pine forests throughout Northeast China. We found that dispersal limitation and ecological drift dominated abundant and rare subcommunities, respectively. Deterministic assembly gradually increased with needle aging, which was mainly attributed to the increased needle chemical defense traits such as flavonoids. We further showed that multiple nutrient cycling in phyllosphere habitat was regulated by the rare subcommunity, closely related to the variations in diversity and composition. Collectively, our findings facilitate us in clarifying the mechanisms underlying the formation and succession of phyllosphere bacterial subcommunities across needle age cohorts and emphasize the vital role of rare subcommunities in promoting ecosystem functions.IMPORTANCEHost-associated microbial communities are critical for host health. However, the relative importance of abundant and rare subcommunities in driving nutrient cycling in phyllosphere habitat across needle age cohorts of evergreen conifers remains unknown. Here, we showed the different assembly mechanisms of abundant and rare subcommunities and emphasized the ecological role of rare subcommunities in promoting ecosystem functions. This is useful for understanding the formation and succession dynamics of plant microbiome to advance future applications with microbial agents to sustainable productivity and reduce diseases.https://journals.asm.org/doi/10.1128/spectrum.00518-25phyllosphere bacteriarare taxaneedle agenutrient cyclingevergreen conifersfunctional traits
spellingShingle Bing Li
Mingyang Fu
Guangze Jin
Zhili Liu
Rare bacterial subcommunity drives nutrient cycling in phyllosphere habitat of evergreen conifers
Microbiology Spectrum
phyllosphere bacteria
rare taxa
needle age
nutrient cycling
evergreen conifers
functional traits
title Rare bacterial subcommunity drives nutrient cycling in phyllosphere habitat of evergreen conifers
title_full Rare bacterial subcommunity drives nutrient cycling in phyllosphere habitat of evergreen conifers
title_fullStr Rare bacterial subcommunity drives nutrient cycling in phyllosphere habitat of evergreen conifers
title_full_unstemmed Rare bacterial subcommunity drives nutrient cycling in phyllosphere habitat of evergreen conifers
title_short Rare bacterial subcommunity drives nutrient cycling in phyllosphere habitat of evergreen conifers
title_sort rare bacterial subcommunity drives nutrient cycling in phyllosphere habitat of evergreen conifers
topic phyllosphere bacteria
rare taxa
needle age
nutrient cycling
evergreen conifers
functional traits
url https://journals.asm.org/doi/10.1128/spectrum.00518-25
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AT mingyangfu rarebacterialsubcommunitydrivesnutrientcyclinginphyllospherehabitatofevergreenconifers
AT guangzejin rarebacterialsubcommunitydrivesnutrientcyclinginphyllospherehabitatofevergreenconifers
AT zhililiu rarebacterialsubcommunitydrivesnutrientcyclinginphyllospherehabitatofevergreenconifers