TY - JOUR T1 - Inoculation with highly-related mycorrhizal fungal siblings, and their interaction with plant genoptypes, strongly shapes tropical mycorrhizal fungal community structure JF - bioRxiv DO - 10.1101/2020.07.31.230490 SP - 2020.07.31.230490 AU - Yuli Marcela Ordoñez AU - Lucas Villard AU - Isabel Ceballos AU - Frédéric G. Masclaux AU - Alia Rodriguez AU - Ian R. Sanders Y1 - 2020/01/01 UR - http://biorxiv.org/content/early/2020/07/31/2020.07.31.230490.abstract N2 - Arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi (AMF) have the potential to increase crop yields and all globally important crops form the mycorrhizal symbiosis. Only a few studies have investigated the impact of introduced AMF on local AMF communities and most studies have only investigated effects of one isolate. We studied the impact on AMF community structure of inoculating roots of the globally important crop cassava with highly genetically-related clonal siblings of two genetically different Rhizophagus irregularis isolates. We hypothesized that inoculation with R. irregularis siblings differentially influences the structure and the diversity of the pre-existing AMF community colonizing cassava. Alpha and beta taxonomic and phylogenetic AMF diversity were strongly and significantly altered differentially following inoculation with sibling AMF progeny. In most cases, the effects were also cassava-genotype specific. Although biomass production and AMF colonization were also both differentially affected by inoculation with sibling R. irregularis progeny these variables were not correlated with changes in the AMF community structure. The results highlight that investigations on the impact of an introduced AMF species, that use only one isolate, are unlikely to be representative of the overall effects of that AMF species and that the genetic identity of the host must be considered. The amount of inoculum added was very small and effects were observed 12 months following inoculation. That such a small amount of almost genetically identical fungal inoculum can strongly differentially influence AMF community structure 12 months following inoculation, indicates that AMF communities in tropical soils are not very resistant to perturbation.Competing Interest StatementThe authors have declared no competing interest. ER -