info:eu-repo/semantics/article
Seed-borne fungal endophytes constrain reproductive success of host plants under ozone pollution
Fecha
2021-11Registro en:
Ueno, Andrea Celeste; Gundel, Pedro Emilio; Ghersa, Claudio Marco; Agathokleous, Evgenios; Martínez Ghersa, María Alejandra; Seed-borne fungal endophytes constrain reproductive success of host plants under ozone pollution; Academic Press Inc Elsevier Science; Environmental Research; 202; 111773; 11-2021; 1-33
0013-9351
CONICET Digital
CONICET
Autor
Ueno, Andrea Celeste
Gundel, Pedro Emilio
Ghersa, Claudio Marco
Agathokleous, Evgenios
Martínez Ghersa, María Alejandra
Resumen
Tropospheric ozone is among the global change factors that pose a threat to plants and microorganisms. Symbiotic microorganisms can assist plants to cope with stress, but their role in the tolerance of plants to ozone is poorly understood. Here, we subjected endophyte-symbiotic and non-symbiotic plants of Lolium multiflorum, an annual species widely distributed in temperate grasslands, to high and low (i.e., charcoal-filtered air) ozone levels at vegetative and reproductive phases. Exposure to high ozone reduced leaf photochemical efficiency and greenness in both symbiotic and non-symbiotic plants. However, ozone-induced oxidative damage at biochemical level (i.e., lipid peroxidation) was mostly detected in symbiotic plants. Ozone exposure at the vegetative phase did not affect the reproductive investment in seeds, indicating full recovery from stress. Ozone exposure at the reproductive phase reduced biomass and seed production only in symbiotic plants indicating a symbiont-associated cost. At low ozone, endophyte-symbiotic plants showed a steeper slope in the relationship between seed number and seed weight (i.e., a number-weight trade-off) compared to non-symbiotic plants. However, when plants were treated at the reproductive phase, ozone increased the imbalance between seed number and seed weight in both endophyte-symbiotic and non-symbiotic plants. Plants with endophytes at the reproductive stage produced fewer seeds, which were not compensated by increased seed weight. Thus, fungal mycelium growing within ovaries or ozone-induced antioxidant systems may result in costs that finally depress the fitness of plants. Despite ozone pollution could destabilize plant-endophyte mutualisms and render them dysfunctional, other endophyte-mediated benefits (e.g., resistance to herbivory, tolerance to drought) could over-compensate these losses and explain the high incidence of the symbiosis in nature.