Abstract

Deep-rooted plants can obtain water and nutrients from the subsoil, making them resilient to climatic changes. Plant growth and health may depend on interactions with root-associated bacteria but the composition and assembly dynamics of deep-root-associated bacterial communities are unknown, as is their ability to supply plants with nitrogen (N). Here, we investigated the root-associated communities of the three deep-rooted perennial crops—lucerne ( Medicago sativa), intermediate wheatgrass ( Thinopyrum intermedium), and rosinweed ( Silphium integrifolium)—grown in 4-m-tall Root Towers under seminatural conditions. Across the plant species, higher bacterial abundance and lower diversity were found in the root-associated communities compared with the bulk soil communities. The deep-root-associated communities were enriched in the genera Pseudarthrobacter, Pseudomonas, Rhizobium, and Streptomyces, genera found to harbor a wide variety of bacterial species expressing plant beneficial traits . The composition of the deep-root-associated bacterial communities were plant species specific, and clearly distinct from the shallow communities. Additionally, the deep-root-associated communities comprised primarily amplicon sequence variants (ASVs) that were omnipresent in the bulk soil and, to a limited extent, ASVs that could have been transported from the topsoil or potentially from the seed. Abundances of genes involved in N-cycling ( amoA, nifH, nirK, nirS, and nosZ) showed plant-species-specific patterns, and indicated that intermediate wheatgrass and lucerne recruit N-fixing bacteria even at 3 m of depth for N supply. This work provides the first steps toward understanding plant–microbe interactions of deep-rooted crops, which are important for evaluating these crops for use in future sustainable cropping systems. [Formula: see text] Copyright © 2022 The Author(s). This is an open access article distributed under the CC BY-NC-ND 4.0 International license .

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