The bacterial community of water yam ( Dioscorea alata L.) cv. A-19 is vital because it may promote plant growth without the need for fertilization. However, the influence of fertilization practices on the composition and proportion of the bacterial community of water yam cv. A-19 has not yet been extensively examined. Therefore, we herein investigated the diversity and composition of the bacterial community of water yam cv. A-19 cultivated with and without chemical fertilization using amplicon community profiling based on 16S rRNA gene sequences. No significant difference was detected in the growth of plants cultivated with or without chemical fertilization. Alpha diversity indices were significantly dependent on each compartment, and a decrease was observed in indices from the belowground (rhizosphere and root) to aboveground compartments (stem and leaf). The bacterial composition of each compartment was clustered into three groups: bulk soil, rhizosphere and root, and stem and leaf. Chemical fertilization did not significantly influence the diversity or composition of the water yam cv. A-19 bacterial community. It remained robust in plants cultivated with chemical fertilization. The amplicon community profiling of bacterial communities also revealed the dominance of two bacterial clades, the Allorhizobium-Neorhizobium-Pararhizobium-Rhizobium clade and Burkholderia-Caballeronia-Paraburkholderia clade, with and without chemical fertilization. This is the first study to characterize the bacterial community of water yam cv. A-19 cultivated with and without chemical fertilization.
Biofertilizers containing high-density plant growth-promoting bacteria are gaining interest as a sustainable solution to environmental problems caused by eutrophication. However, owing to the limitations of current investigative techniques, the selected microorganisms are not always preferred by the host plant, preventing recruitment into the native microbiota or failing to induce plant growth-promoting effects. To address this, five nitrogen-fixing bacteria previously isolated from water yam (Dioscorea alata L.) plants and showing dominant abundance of 1% or more in the water yam microbiota were selected for analysis of their plant growth-promoting activities when used as a synthetic bacterial inoculant. Water yam cv. A-19 plants were inoculated twice at 10 and 12 weeks after planting under greenhouse conditions. Bacterial communities in root, rhizosphere, and bulk soil samples were characterized using high-throughput 16S rRNA amplicon sequencing. Compared with non-inoculated plants, all bacterial communities were significantly altered by inoculation, mainly at the genus level. The inoculation effects were apparently found in the root communities at 16 weeks after planting, with all inoculated genera showing dominance (in the top 35 genera) compared with the control samples. However, no significant differences in any of the growth parameters or nitrogen contents were observed between treatments. At 20 weeks after planting, the dominance of Stenotrophomonas in the inoculated roots decreased, indicating a decline in the inoculation effects. Interestingly, only the Allorhizobium-Neorhizobium-Pararhizobium-Rhizobium clade was dominant (>1% relative abundance) across all samples, suggesting that bacteria related to this clade are essential core bacteria for water yam growth. This is the first report on addition of a synthetic nitrogen-fixing bacterial community in water yam plants showing that native bacterial communities can be replaced by a synthetic bacterial community, with declining in the effects of Stenotrophomonas on the modified communities several weeks after inoculation.
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