Competition is a key process that determines plant community structure and dynamics, often mediated by nutrients and water availability. However, the role of soil microorganisms on plant competition, and the links between above- and belowground processes, are not well understood. Here we show that the effects of interspecific plant competition on plant performance are mediated by feedbacks between plants and soil bacterial communities. Each plant species selects a singular community of soil microorganisms in its rhizosphere with a specific species composition, abundance and activity. When two plant species interact, the resulting soil bacterial community matches that of the most competitive plant species, suggesting strong competitive inter...
microbial ecology, natural selection, phenotypic selection analysis, plant–microbe interaction, spec...
Plants exist across varying biotic and abiotic environments, including variation in the composition ...
Soil communities associated with specific plant species affect individual plants\u27 growth and comp...
1. Coexistence and diversity in plant communities depend upon outcomes of plant competition. Competi...
Interspecific competition and plant-soil feedbacks are powerful drivers of plant community structure...
The biotic and abiotic factors that contribute to plant community structure and stability are of gre...
Interactions between plant and soil communities have important implication for plant competition, de...
Plant¿soil feedback affects performance and competitive ability of individual plants. However, the i...
Abstract Plants interact simultaneously with each other and with soil biota, yet the relative import...
Soil microbial communities may influence the composition and species abundance of plant communities ...
Plants allocate resources to processes related to growth and enemy defence. Simultaneously, they int...
Interspecific competition and plant-soil feedbacks are powerful drivers of plant community structure...
Soil microbes and soil fauna have been assumed to play a key role in interspecific plant competition...
A growing body of research on plant–microbe interactions in soil is contributing to the development ...
We used high-throughput sequencing and multivariate analyses to describe soil microbial community co...
microbial ecology, natural selection, phenotypic selection analysis, plant–microbe interaction, spec...
Plants exist across varying biotic and abiotic environments, including variation in the composition ...
Soil communities associated with specific plant species affect individual plants\u27 growth and comp...
1. Coexistence and diversity in plant communities depend upon outcomes of plant competition. Competi...
Interspecific competition and plant-soil feedbacks are powerful drivers of plant community structure...
The biotic and abiotic factors that contribute to plant community structure and stability are of gre...
Interactions between plant and soil communities have important implication for plant competition, de...
Plant¿soil feedback affects performance and competitive ability of individual plants. However, the i...
Abstract Plants interact simultaneously with each other and with soil biota, yet the relative import...
Soil microbial communities may influence the composition and species abundance of plant communities ...
Plants allocate resources to processes related to growth and enemy defence. Simultaneously, they int...
Interspecific competition and plant-soil feedbacks are powerful drivers of plant community structure...
Soil microbes and soil fauna have been assumed to play a key role in interspecific plant competition...
A growing body of research on plant–microbe interactions in soil is contributing to the development ...
We used high-throughput sequencing and multivariate analyses to describe soil microbial community co...
microbial ecology, natural selection, phenotypic selection analysis, plant–microbe interaction, spec...
Plants exist across varying biotic and abiotic environments, including variation in the composition ...
Soil communities associated with specific plant species affect individual plants\u27 growth and comp...