Biotechnology Bulletin ›› 2026, Vol. 42 ›› Issue (5): 147-157.doi: 10.13560/j.cnki.biotech.bull.1985.2025-1455

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Community Assembly Mechanisms and Cross-niche Network Correlation between Robusta Coffee Cherry Surface and Soil Microbiomes

PI Wen-zhi(), WANG Qun, LIU Xin-yuan, WANG Zhu-jun()   

  1. School of Tropical Agriculture and Forestry, Hainan University, Haikou 570228
  • Received:2025-12-31 Online:2026-05-26 Published:2026-06-10
  • Contact: WANG Zhu-jun E-mail:zhiwenpi0207@163.com;zhujunwang@hainanu.edu.cn

Abstract:

Objective The microbiome associated with Robusta coffee (Coffea canephora) plays a critical role in plant health and quality. However, the community assembly mechanisms and the connectivity between the coffee cherry surface and soil niches remain poorly understood. This study aimed to elucidate the microbial community construction mechanisms and characterize the cross-niche correlation network between the coffee cherry surface and the underlying soil environment. Method Quantitative PCR (qPCR) and high-throughput sequencing technologies were employed to analyze the microbial community characteristics across three distinct niches: Coffee cherry surfaces (CF), coffee bulk soil (CRBS), and coffee rhizosphere soil (CRS). Subsequently, comprehensive bioinformatic analyses were performed, including fast expectation-maximization for microbial source tracking, community assembly process modeling, and cross-niche correlation network construction. Result The microbial community abundance and diversity exhibited a significant decreasing gradient from soil to coffee cherry. Significant differences in community structure were observed between the coffee cherry and soil compartments (P<0.05). Source tracking analysis revealed that the soil contribution to the coffee cherry surface community was less than 6%, suggesting a distinct origin for the coffee cherry surface microbiome. Furthermore, the community assembly processes differed significantly across niches: soil prokaryotic community assembly was primarily governed by deterministic processes, whereas the coffee cherry surface community was dominated by stochastic processes. Fungal communities, conversely, were generally driven by dispersal limitation across all niches. The cross-niche correlation network displayed a highly modular architecture, identifying Spirosoma and Ascobolus as core keystone taxa. These taxa acted as critical hubs, facilitating potential functional synergy and environmental responses between the soil and coffee cherry surface. Conclusion This study demonstrates that the microbial community on Hainan C. canephora cherry surfaces possesses a distinct stochastic assembly pattern that differs significantly from soil communities. Despite these structural differences, potential functional synergy exists between these niches, mediated by specific keystone taxa. We conclude that future coffee agricultural management should prioritize the regulation of key cross-niche network nodes, such as Spirosoma and Ascobolus.

Key words: Robusta coffee, niche differentiation, microbial source tracking, community assembly, cross-niche network