Abstract

Soil texture, i.e. the fractions of different sized mineral particles, is critical to root growth and an important determinant of the occurrence and distribution of soil microbiota. More recently it was shown that individual plant species and even different cultivars harbor highly distinct rhizosphere associated microbiota, but it is still an open question how soil texture and its influence on root growth feeds back on root microbial assembly.We manipulated soil texture by stepwise additions of quartz sand to an agricultural loam. We grew maize (Zea mays L.) in these soils, measured changes in root traits and sampled bulk soil and rhizosphere to apply amplicon based high-throughput sequencing. We investigated changes in root morphology of maize and the concomitant shift in prokaryote (archaea and bacteria) and protist (Cercozoa and Endomyxa) diversity, community composition and co-occurrence in the maize rhizosphere along the soil texture gradient.A linear relationship between loam fraction and root morphology and a shift in microbial diversity along the soil texture gradient, as well as a stronger selection effect of the rhizosphere in soils with a high sand fraction (and high bulk density) were found. Co-occurrence network analysis revealed high modularity in fine textured soil, demonstrating that bulk density and texture are important factors affecting the recruitment of the core rhizosphere microbiome of maize.

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