Arbuscular Mycorrhizae Fungi Diversity in the Root–Rhizosphere–Soil of Tetraena mongolica, Sarcozygium xanthoxylon, and Nitraria tangutorum Bobr in Western Ordos, China

Author:

Xu Daolong1,Yu Xiaowen2,Chen Jin3,Liu Haijing1,Zheng Yaxin1,Qu Hanting1,Bao Yuying2

Affiliation:

1. Key Laboratory of Forage and Endemic Crop Biotechnology, Ministry of Education, School of Life Sciences, Inner Mongolia University, Hohhot 010010, China

2. Inner Mongolia Autonomous Region Environmental Monitoring Station, Hohhot 010020, China

3. National Engineering Laboratory of Crop Stress Resistance Breeding, Anhui Agricultural University, Hefei 230036, China

Abstract

Arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi (AMF) are considered to be an essential indicator of ecosystem biodiversity and can increase a plant’s ability to withstand arid conditions. Despite the obvious significance of AMF in the root and rhizosphere system, little is known about how the AMF variety varies between the soil and roots of endangered plants and how this varies depending on habitats in dry and semiarid regions. This study aimed to address this research gap by investigating the characteristics and diversity of AMF colonization in Zygophyllaceae. Using Illumina MiSeq high-throughput sequencing, indigenous AMF in the roots and rhizosphere soil of three endangered plants (Tetraena mongolica, Sarcozygium xanthoxylon, and Nitraria tangutorum Bobr) were investigated. The three threatened plants had different AMF populations in their root and rhizosphere soils, according to a hierarchical clustering analysis. AMF communities in rhizosphere soil were more sensitive to LDA than root AMF communities based on linear discriminant analysis effect size (LEfSe). Glomus, Septoglomus, and Rhizophagus were seen to function as dominant fungi as the soil and root AMF populations carried out their various tasks in the soil and roots as a cohesive collective. Distance-based redundancy analysis (db-RDA) showed that pH, total phosphorus, and accessible potassium were closely associated with AMF communities. The pH of the soil appears to be an important factor in determining AMF community stability. These findings can serve as a guide for the use of AM fungus in the rehabilitation of agricultural land in arid regions. In summary, our work contributed new knowledge for the scientific preservation of these endangered plant species and for the further investigation of the symbiotic link between AMF and endangered plant species.

Funder

the Inner Mongolia Natural Science Foundation project

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Agronomy and Crop Science

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