Unraveling microbial community structure–function relationships in the horizontal and vertical spatial dimensions in extreme environments

Author:

Jing Xin1ORCID,Classen Aimée T.2ORCID,Li Daijiang34ORCID,Lin Litao5ORCID,Lu Mingzhen67ORCID,Sanders Nathan J.2ORCID,Wang Yugang8910ORCID,Feng Wenting11ORCID

Affiliation:

1. State Key Laboratory of Herbage Improvement and Grassland Agro‐Ecosystems, and College of Pastoral Agriculture Science and Technology, Lanzhou University Lanzhou Gansu China

2. Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, University of Michigan Ann Arbor MI USA

3. Department of Biological Sciences, Louisiana State University Baton Rouge LA USA

4. Center for Computation and Technology, Louisiana State University Baton Rouge LA USA

5. Chinese Research Academy of Environmental Sciences Beijing China

6. Santa Fe Institute Santa Fe NM USA

7. Department of Environmental Studies, New York University NY USA

8. State Key Laboratory of Desert and Oasis Ecology, Xinjiang Institute of Ecology and Geography, Chinese Academy of Sciences Urumqi Xinjiang China

9. Fukang Station of Desert Ecology, Chinese Academy of Sciences Fukang Xinjiang China

10. University of Chinese Academy of Sciences Beijing China

11. School of Grassland Science, Beijing Forestry University Beijing China

Abstract

A fundamental challenge in soil macroecology is to understand how microbial community structure shapes ecosystem function along environmental gradients of the land surface at broad spatial scales (i.e. the horizontal dimension). However, little is known about microbial community structure–function relationships in extreme environments along environmental gradients of soil depth at finer spatial scales (i.e. the vertical dimension). Here, we propose a general spatial dimension partitioning approach for assessing the patterns and drivers of soil microbial community structure–function relationships across horizontal and vertical spatial gradients simultaneously. We leveraged a 200‐km desert soil salinity gradient created by a 12‐year saline‐water irrigation in the Tarim basin of Taklamakan Desert. Specifically, using a general linear model, hierarchical variance partitioning, and a path model, we assessed the patterns and key ecological processes controlling spatial turnover in microbial community structure (i.e. β‐diversity) and enzymatic activity relevant to carbon, nitrogen, and phosphorus cycling along soil salinity gradients across study sites (horizontal dimension) and soil depths (vertical dimension). We found a decoupled relationship between soil microbial β‐diversity and enzymatic activity. Differences in soil depth (on the scale of meters) were as important as geographic distance (on the scale of kilometers) in shaping bacterial and fungal β‐diversity. However, the vertical and horizontal turnover in enzymatic activity was largely attributed to an increase in the heterogeneity of soil properties, such as soil texture, water content, and pH. Our findings suggest that dispersal limitation controls microbial community β‐diversity and that environmental heterogeneity, rather than soil salinization, controls enzymatic activity. Taken together, this work highlights that in the face of ongoing environmental alterations, soil depth is an under‐explored spatial dimension that must be considered in soil conservation efforts as a critical factor in determining microbial community structure and function in extreme environments.

Publisher

Wiley

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