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Evaluating the legacy of drought exposure on root and rhizosphere bacterial microbiomes over two plant generations.

Bintarti AF, Sulesky-Grieb A, Colovas J, Marolleau B, Boureau T

Climate Adaptation

PubMed

If drought conditions can program a plant's offspring to host different soil microbes, gardeners and farmers may one day use 'stress-trained' seeds to grow more resilient crops in an increasingly dry world.

Scientists found that when common bean plants lived through a drought, their children — the next generation grown from their seeds — had noticeably different communities of bacteria living in and around their roots, even when those offspring were grown in normal conditions. This suggests drought leaves a kind of biological memory that gets passed down. That memory in the soil microbes around the roots may help (or hinder) future plants in coping with water shortages.

Key Findings

1

Drought exposure in parent plants altered the root and rhizosphere bacterial microbiome composition in the next generation of offspring, even when offspring were grown without drought stress.

2

The legacy effects of parental drought were detectable in both the root interior (endosphere) and the surrounding soil zone (rhizosphere), indicating the influence extends across multiple microbial compartments.

3

Common bean, a globally important staple crop, was used as the study organism, making the findings directly relevant to food security under climate change scenarios.

chevron_right Technical Summary

Plants that experienced drought can pass stress-related changes to their offspring's root microbiomes, meaning a dry season may shape not just the current crop but the next generation's ability to survive water stress.

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Abstract Preview

Drought is a critical risk for staple crops like common bean (

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hub This connects to 11 other discoveries — Common Bean climate-adaptation, soil-health, crop-improvement +2 more 5 related articles

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