Assembly processes and co-occurrence of bacterial communities in tree rhizosphere under Pb-Zn contamination

Rhizosphere bacteria are critical for supporting plant performance in stressful environments. Understanding the assembly and co-occurrence of rhizosphere bacterial communities contributes significantly to both plant growth and heavy metal accumulation. In this study, Ligustrum lucidum and Melia azed...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of hazardous materials 2024-09, Vol.476, p.135135, Article 135135
Hauptverfasser: Xu, Hongyang, Zou, Ziying, Jin, Yuke, Kuzyakov, Yakov, Huang, Xinhao, Wu, Xiaohong, Zhu, Fan
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Rhizosphere bacteria are critical for supporting plant performance in stressful environments. Understanding the assembly and co-occurrence of rhizosphere bacterial communities contributes significantly to both plant growth and heavy metal accumulation. In this study, Ligustrum lucidum and Melia azedarach were planted in soils with simulated varying levels of Pb-Zn contamination. The Rhizosphere bacterial communities were investigated by using 16S rRNA gene sequencing. The impacts of Pb-Zn contamination on the diversity and structure of the rhizosphere bacterial community were found to be greater than those of both tree species. The variation in bacterial community structure in both trees was mainly driven by the combinations of Pb-Zn and soil properties. Deterministic processes (non-planted, 82 %; L. lucidum, 73 %; M. azedarach, 55 %) proved to be the most important assembly processes for soil bacterial communities, but both trees increased the importance of stochastic processes (18 %, 27 %, 45 %). The rhizosphere co-occurrence networks exhibited greater stability compared to the non-planted soil networks. Rare taxa played a dominant role in maintaining the stability of rhizosphere networks, as most of the keystone taxa within rhizosphere networks belonged to rare taxa. Dissimilarities in the structure and network complexity of rhizosphere bacterial communities were significantly associated with differences in tree biomass and metal accumulation. These variations in response varied between both trees, with L. lucidum exhibiting greater potential for phytoremediation in its rhizosphere compared to M. azedarach. Our results offer valuable insights for designing effective microbe-assisted phytoremediation systems. [Display omitted] •The effect of Pb-Zn contamination on bacteria was greater than that of both trees.•Pb-Zn and soil properties jointly shaped bacterial community structure in trees.•L. lucidum and M. azedarach increased the importance of stochastic processes.•Trees contributed to the intensity of bacterial interactions and network complexity.•Rare taxa played a dominating role for stability of rhizosphere networks.
ISSN:0304-3894
1873-3336
1873-3336
DOI:10.1016/j.jhazmat.2024.135135