Chinese chestnut did not induce negative plant soil feedback during centuries of growth

Open Access
Authors
  • Xu Cheng
  • Zhichun Yan
  • Qian Li
  • Lucas Schmitz
  • Jundi Yan
  • Yueyang Ge
  • Yanping Lan
  • Yaceng Zhao
  • Yiyang Wang
  • Guangdong Li
  • Yang Liu
  • Martinus Schneijderberg
  • Liu Yang
  • Huihui Bian
  • Aalt D.J. van Dijk ORCID logo
  • Ling Qin
  • Qingqin Cao
  • Ton Bisseling
Publication date 20-03-2025
Journal Science of the Total Environment
Article number 178883
Volume | Issue number 970
Number of pages 12
Organisations
  • Faculty of Science (FNWI) - Swammerdam Institute for Life Sciences (SILS)
Abstract
Certain tree species can reach ages of centuries, whereas lifespan of species like apple are markedly shorter. The latter is caused by negative plant-soil feedback that results in microbiome changes. We hypothesized that tree species with a long lifespan will be able to avoid such negative feedback and their root-associated microbiomes will be similar in trees of different ages. To test this, we used Chinese chestnut (Castanea mollissima) trees, ranging from 8 to 830 years old from a Ming orchard at the Great Wall. Their root-associated microbiomes were analysed by using meta-amplicon sequencing analysis. Their root-associated bacterial microbiomes were rather similar although based on linear regression models we cannot exclude that age has a weak correlation with microbiome compositions. When chestnut seedlings were grown for 3 months in soil associated with young or old trees, the plants were healthy and their growth was similar. This strongly supported that negative feedback had not occurred. Pseudomonas OTU1, a member of the core microbiome and representing >50 % of the rhizosphere community, strongly inhibited growth of chestnut pathogens and stimulated plant growth. Such properties of the microbiome, in combination with a high number of resistance genes can contribute to longevity of chestnut.
Document type Article
Language English
Published at https://doi.org/10.1016/j.scitotenv.2025.178883
Other links https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/85219452039
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