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Potato Root-Associated Microbiomes Adapt to Combined Water and Nutrient Limitation and have a Plant Genotype-Specific Role for Plant Stress Mitigation

Faist, Hanna; Trognitz, Friederike; Antonielli, Livio; Symanczik, Sarah; White, Philip and Sessitsch, Angela (2021) Potato Root-Associated Microbiomes Adapt to Combined Water and Nutrient Limitation and have a Plant Genotype-Specific Role for Plant Stress Mitigation. Research Square, online, pp. 1-33. [Submitted]

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Document available online at: https://assets.researchsquare.com/files/rs-492999/v1/94dd1c7a-595b-4dfe-ba2a-ddd68f1ab5e0.pdf?c=1631882299


Summary

Background
Due to climate change and reduced use of fertilizers combined stress scenarios are becoming increasingly frequent in crop production. In a eld experiment we tested the effect of combined water and phosphorus limitation on the growth performance and plant traits of eight tetraploid and two diploid potato varieties as well as on root-associated microbiome diversity and functional potential. Microbiome and metagenome analysis targeted the diversity and potential functions of prokaryotes, fungi, plasmids and bacteriophages and was linked to plant traits like tuber yield or timing of canopy closure.


EPrint Type:Journal paper
Keywords:Shotgun metagenomics, Solanum tuberosum, Solanum phureja, bacteriophage, plant-microbe interaction, plasmid, rhizosphere, endophytes, rhizobacteria, drough, Abacus, FiBL1010302
Agrovoc keywords:
Language
Value
URI
English
drought
http://aims.fao.org/aos/agrovoc/c_2391
English
climate change
http://aims.fao.org/aos/agrovoc/c_1666
English
fertilizers
http://aims.fao.org/aos/agrovoc/c_2867
Subjects: Environmental aspects > Air and water emissions
Crop husbandry > Production systems > Root crops
Research affiliation: Switzerland > FiBL - Research Institute of Organic Agriculture Switzerland > Crops > Arable crops > Root crop
Switzerland > FiBL - Research Institute of Organic Agriculture Switzerland > Soil > Soil quality
Deposited By: Forschungsinstitut für biologischen Landbau, FiBL
ID Code:43325
Deposited On:14 Jan 2022 14:17
Last Modified:17 Jan 2022 11:53
Document Language:English
Status:Submitted
Refereed:Submitted for peer-review but not yet accepted

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