Abstract

AbstractBarley grain harvested for malting poses an interesting case study for the impacts of plant‐associated microbiomes because the conditions created during malting favour continued vigorous microbial activity after grain harvest. Suppression of pathogens is among the key functions performed by microbiomes, and it would be beneficial if we could harness this function. Over a 3‐year field trial, we micro‐malted barley that had been experimentally infested with each of seven different strains of the fungal pathogen Fusarium graminearum, and profiled bacterial microbiomes at key stages in the malting process (grain, post‐steeping, post‐germination and final dried malt). The greatest impacts on bacterial microbiomes were observed to be from the year and stage of malting, with comparatively fewer impacts of barley cultivar or pathogen strain. Relatively limited impacts of the presence and strain identity of fungal pathogen on the bacterial microbiome of malting barley probably reflects the colonization by other fungi, as our inoculation took place under field conditions with supplemental irrigation. Both community level shifts and significant responses by individual taxa were evident. Microbiome characteristics or the relative abundances of specific bacterial taxa helped to explain pathogen biomass, mycotoxin production and beer gushing. Manipulative experiments will be required to test hypotheses suggested by these microbiome profiles.

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