Legacies of consecutive summer droughts on soil‐borne plant parasitic protists (Oomycota: Stramenopila and Phytomyxea: Rhizaria) and protistan consumers (Cercozoa: Rhizaria) along an experimental plant diversity gradient
Marcel Dominik Solbach, Cynthia Albracht, Kenneth Dumack, Nico Eisenhauer, Anna Maria Fiore‐Donno, Nils Heck, Anja Vogel, Cameron Wagg, Michael Bonkowski

TL;DR
Repeated summer droughts and plant diversity loss affect soil-borne plant parasites and consumers, potentially harming grassland ecosystems.
Contribution
The study reveals long-lasting soil legacy effects of drought on protistan parasites and consumers in diverse plant communities.
Findings
Oomycota and Cercozoa responded to plant diversity and drought, with species-specific Oomycota enriched under drought.
Phytomyxea and cercozoan consumers showed shifts in operational taxonomic units under drought.
Plant diversity did not mitigate the negative effects of drought on protistan communities.
Abstract
Increasing frequencies of severe summer droughts and plant diversity loss disrupt ecosystem functioning and stability of European grasslands. Understanding how these factors interact with pathogens is crucial.We investigated the effects of plant diversity and repeated summer drought on soil‐borne parasites within a grassland biodiversity experiment. The experiment included plant communities ranging from 1 to 60 species, with a sub‐experiment simulating annual droughts for 6 wk in summer over 9 yr. One year after the final drought period, we analyzed the diversity and community composition of two parasitic protistan taxa with many plant‐pathogenic members, Oomycota (Stramenopila) and Phytomyxea (Rhizaria), as well as protistan consumers in the Cercozoa (Rhizaria) using amplicon sequencing.Both Oomycota and Cercozoa, including Phytomyxea, responded to plant species richness and drought,…
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Taxonomy
TopicsProtist diversity and phylogeny · Plant Parasitism and Resistance · Mycorrhizal Fungi and Plant Interactions
