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Arid soil bacteria legacies improve drought resilience of a keystone grass
  • +8
  • Riley Hodgson,
  • Christian Cando-Dumancela,
  • Tarryn Davies,
  • Victoria Drysdale,
  • Nicole Fickling,
  • Craig Liddicoat,
  • Shawn Peddle,
  • Sunita Ramesh,
  • Declan Spoor,
  • Alex Taylor,
  • Martin Breed
Riley Hodgson
Flinders University

Corresponding Author:riley.hodgson@flinders.edu.au

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Christian Cando-Dumancela
Flinders University
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Tarryn Davies
Flinders University
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Victoria Drysdale
Flinders University
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Nicole Fickling
Flinders University
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Craig Liddicoat
Flinders University
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Shawn Peddle
Flinders University
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Sunita Ramesh
Flinders University
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Declan Spoor
Flinders University
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Alex Taylor
Flinders University
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Martin Breed
Flinders University
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Abstract

Plant-microbe interactions are critical to ecosystem functioning and result in soil legacies, where plants influence the soil in which they grow affecting the fitness of future generations. Soil legacies are driven in part by the two-step selection process, where soil microbes are recruited from bulk soil into rhizospheres (space around roots) and then into endospheres (within plant roots). However, the potential of these soil legacies to provide host plant drought tolerance is poorly understood. In a drought stress greenhouse trial, we show that arid soil legacies increased the biomass under both drought and control conditions of the keystone grass Themeda triandra. We report strong positive associations between T. triandra biomass and bacterial alpha diversity across soils, rhizospheres and endospheres. These findings show that bacterial soil legacies have an important but underappreciated role in grassland resilience to drought, and could be better harnessed to support resilient grassland restoration efforts.