# Host Lifeform Shapes Phyllospheric Microbiome Assembly in Mountain Lake: Deterministic Selection and Stochastic Colonization Dynamics

**Authors:** Qishan Xue, Jinxian Liu, Yirui Cao, Yuqi Wei

PMC · DOI: 10.3390/microorganisms13050960 · 2025-04-23

## TL;DR

This study explores how different aquatic plants shape their leaf surface bacterial communities in a mountain lake, revealing how deterministic and random processes influence microbial diversity.

## Contribution

The study identifies distinct assembly mechanisms of phyllospheric microbiomes across four macrophyte species in a subalpine lake.

## Key findings

- Gammaproteobacteria dominate in three macrophytes, while Alphaproteobacteria dominate in Myriophyllum spicatum.
- Deterministic processes govern S. validus and M. spicatum, while stochastic processes govern H. vulgaris and N. peltatum.
- Water chemistry and leaf composition are key drivers of bacterial community β-diversity.

## Abstract

The phyllosphere microbiome of aquatic macrophytes constitutes an integral component of freshwater ecosystems, serving crucial functions in global biogeochemical cycling and anthropogenic pollutant remediation. In this study, we examined the assembly mechanisms of epiphytic bacterial communities across four phylogenetically diverse macrophyte species (Scirpus validus, Hippuris vulgaris, Nymphoides peltatum, and Myriophyllum spicatum) inhabiting Ningwu Mayinghai Lake (38.87° N, 112.20° E), a vulnerable subalpine freshwater system in Shanxi Province, China. Through 16S rRNA amplicon sequencing, we demonstrate marked phyllospheric microbiome divergence, as follows: Gammaproteobacteria dominated S. validus, H. vulgaris and N. peltatum, while Alphaproteobacteria dominated in M. spicatum. The nitrate, nitrite, and pH value of water bodies and the chlorophyll, leaf nitrogen, and carbon contents of plant leaves are the main driving forces affecting the changes in the β-diversity of epiphytic bacterial communities of four plant species. The partitioning of assembly processes revealed that deterministic dominance governed S. validus and M. spicatum, where niche-based selection contributed 67.5% and 100% to community assembly, respectively. Conversely, stochastic processes explained 100% of the variability in H. vulgaris and N. peltatum microbiomes, predominantly mediated by dispersal limitation and ecological drift. This investigation advances the understanding of microbial community structural dynamics and diversity stabilization strategies in aquatic macrophyte-associated microbiomes, while establishing conceptual frameworks between plant–microbe symbiosis and the ecological homeostasis mechanisms within vulnerable subalpine freshwater ecosystems. The empirical references derived from these findings offer novel perspectives for developing conservation strategies aimed at sustaining biodiversity equilibrium in high-altitude lake habitats, particularly in the climatically sensitive regions of north-central China.

## Linked entities

- **Chemicals:** nitrate (PubChem CID 943), nitrite (PubChem CID 946), chlorophyll (PubChem CID 156620228)
- **Species:** Hippuris vulgaris (taxon 39321), Myriophyllum spicatum (taxon 208873), Mus musculus (taxon 10090)

## Full-text entities

- **Chemicals:** nitrate (MESH:D009566), carbon (MESH:D002244), nitrogen (MESH:D009584), nitrite (MESH:D009573), chlorophyll (MESH:D002734)
- **Species:** Myriophyllum spicatum (species) [taxon 208873], Nothocestrum peltatum (species) [taxon 2570261], Schoenoplectus tabernaemontani (species) [taxon 316508], S. validus [taxon 529455], Hippuris vulgaris (species) [taxon 39321]

## Figures

8 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12113992/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12113992