Arbuscular mycorrhizas

Model
Digital Document
Publisher
Florida Atlantic University
Description
Emerging insights on the role of microbiomes in the sustainability of ecosystems and plant cover are transforming knowledge-driven agro-environmental management practices. For more than a century, the Brazilian pepper tree -BP (Schinus terebinthifolius), a category 1 invasive plant in Florida has defied numerous conventional control measures directed at its well-known ecology. This dissertation is one of the pioneer studies designed to determine whether microorganisms play a role in the aggressive invasion of BP in Florida and examine potential mechanisms with the goal of creating supplemental restoration tools. To test the hypothesis that enhanced mutualism of Brazilian pepper tree with microbes, compounded by relatively low biotic resistance of Florida soils is a critical driver of its invasion, plant biomass indices, metagenomics analysis of microbial community shifts, electron microscopy of endomycorrhizal infection and qPCR of key rhizobacterial taxa were measured. A multifactorial grow-room experiment was conducted simulating invasion with BP and two Florida natives (Pinus elliottii and Bidens alba) in a sterile, bioinoculant supplemented, and non-sterile control soils with various plant combinations.