Contribution of floral transmission to the assembly and health impact of bacterial communities in watermelon seeds
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Flower-sourced assembly of seed microbiota remains an understudied ecological process. Here, we investigated the floral transmission pathway for bacterial acquisition by developing seeds of watermelon ( Citrullus lanatus ). Comparison of stigma- and seed-associated bacterial communities from field-grown C. lanatus revealed significant overlap: up to 40% of the bacterial diversity that was detected in seed was also found on stigmas. In a field pollinator exclusion experiment, honeybee visitation to flower stigmas had no significant effect on bacterial community composition in seeds. Among a collection of bacterial isolates from stigmas and seeds in the field, more than half (57%) were able to transmit to seeds after inoculation onto stigmas under laboratory conditions. Interestingly, for most bacterial strains, fruit set rates increased after floral inoculation, and in some cases even in the absence of transmission to the seed. We also found that bacterial isolates from watermelon stigmas and seeds had variable (i.e. positive or negative) effects on seed germination and seedling emergence. Our findings highlight the contribution of floral transmission to seed microbiota assembly and its consequences for plant fitness.