Abstract

Soil salinity often hinders plant productivity in both natural and agricultural settings. Arbuscular mycorrhizal fungal (AMF) symbionts can mediate plant stress responses by enhancing salinity tolerance, but less attention has been devoted to measuring these effects across plant-AMF studies. We performed a meta-analysis of published studies to determine how AMF symbionts influence plant responses under non-stressed vs. salt-stressed conditions. Compared to non-AMF plants, AMF plants had significantly higher shoot and root biomass (p < 0.0001) both under non-stressed conditions and in the presence of varying levels of NaCl salinity in soil, and the differences became more prominent as the salinity stress increased. Categorical analyses revealed that the accumulation of plant shoot and root biomass was influenced by various factors, such as the host life cycle and lifestyle, the fungal group, and the duration of the AMF and salinity treatments. More specifically, the effect of Funneliformis on plant shoot biomass was more prominent as the salinity level increased. Additionally, under stress, AMF increased shoot biomass more on plants that are dicots, plants that have nodulation capacity and plants that use the C3 plant photosynthetic pathway. When plants experienced short-term stress (<2 weeks), the effect of AMF was not apparent, but under longer-term stress (>4 weeks), AMF had a distinct effect on the plant response. For the first time, we observed significant phylogenetic signals in plants and mycorrhizal species in terms of their shoot biomass response to moderate levels of salinity stress, i.e., closely related plants had more similar responses, and closely related mycorrhizal species had similar effects than distantly related species. In contrast, the root biomass accumulation trait was related to fungal phylogeny only under non-stressed conditions and not under stressed conditions. Additionally, the influence of AMF on plant biomass was found to be unrelated to plant phylogeny. In line with the greater biomass accumulation in AMF plants, AMF improved the water status, photosynthetic efficiency and uptake of Ca and K in plants irrespective of salinity stress. The uptake of N and P was higher in AMF plants, and as the salinity increased, the trend showed a decline but had a clear upturn as the salinity stress increased to a high level. The activities of malondialdehyde (MDA), peroxidase (POD), and superoxide dismutase (SOD) as well as the proline content changed due to AMF treatment under salinity stress. The accumulation of proline and catalase (CAT) was observed only when plants experienced moderate salinity stress, but peroxidase (POD) and superoxide dismutase (SOD) were significantly increased in AMF plants irrespective of salinity stress. Taken together, arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi influenced plant growth and physiology, and their effects were more notable when their host plants experienced salinity stress and were influenced by plant and fungal traits.

Highlights

  • Salinity is a major environmental problem that limits agricultural productivity worldwide, especially in arid and semiarid regions (Munns and Gilliham, 2015)

  • Our current meta-analysis of 97 published peer reviews related to the effect of AMF on plant responses under salinity stress revealed that compared to non-inoculated plants, AMF plants had significantly higher shoot and root biomass regardless of salinity stress and that the effect was more prominent as salinity stress increased

  • We observed for the first time that significant phylogenetic signals exist in AMF-mediated plant salinity tolerance, i.e., closely related plant species had more similar responses to moderate salinity stress when inoculated with closely related AMF species

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Summary

Introduction

Salinity is a major environmental problem that limits agricultural productivity worldwide, especially in arid and semiarid regions (Munns and Gilliham, 2015). Reduced water and nutrient uptake lead to osmotic stress, ion toxicity, and nutrient imbalances, resulting in significant reductions in plant growth and crop production (Munns and Tester, 2008; Hanin et al, 2016). Soil salinity problems are projected to worsen in the coming years in many low-lying areas due to the changing climate (Zörb et al, 2019). Plant species are commonly associated with fungal symbionts such as mycorrhizal fungi and endophytes (within plants), which may influence their responses to environmental stimuli, including salinity stress

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