Soil microbial subcommunity assembly mechanisms are highly variable and intimately linked to their ecological and functional traits

Author:

Fan Qiuping1,Liu Kaifang1,Wang Zelin1,Liu Dong2,Li Ting13,Hou Haiyan4,Zhang Zejin35,Chen Danhong13,Zhang Song1,Yu Anlan1,Deng Yongcui6,Cui Xiaoyong3,Che Rongxiao1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Yunnan Key Laboratory of Soil Erosion Prevention and Green Development, Institute of International Rivers and Eco‐security Yunnan University Kunming China

2. School of Life Sciences Yunnan University Kunming China

3. College of Life Sciences University of Chinese Academy of Sciences Beijing China

4. School of Ecology and Environment Science Yunnan University Kunming China

5. Sino‐Danish College University of Chinese Academy of Sciences Beijing China

6. School of Geography Sciences Nanjing Normal University Nanjing China

Abstract

AbstractRevealing the mechanisms underlying soil microbial community assembly is a fundamental objective in molecular ecology. However, despite increasing body of research on overall microbial community assembly mechanisms, our understanding of subcommunity assembly mechanisms for different prokaryotic and fungal taxa remains limited. Here, soils were collected from more than 100 sites across southwestern China. Based on amplicon high‐throughput sequencing and iCAMP analysis, we determined the subcommunity assembly mechanisms for various microbial taxa. The results showed that dispersal limitation and homogenous selection were the primary drivers of soil microbial community assembly in this region. However, the subcommunity assembly mechanisms of different soil microbial taxa were highly variable. For instance, the contribution of homogenous selection to Crenarchaeota subcommunity assembly was 70%, but it was only around 10% for the subcommunity assembly of Actinomycetes, Gemmatimonadetes and Planctomycetes. The assembly of subcommunities including microbial taxa with higher occurrence frequencies, average relative abundance and network degrees, as well as wider niches tended to be more influenced by homogenizing dispersal and drift, but less affected by heterogeneous selection and dispersal limitation. The subcommunity assembly mechanisms also varied substantially among different functional guilds. Notably, the subcommunity assembly of diazotrophs, nitrifiers, saprotrophs and some pathogens were predominantly controlled by homogenous selection, while that of denitrifiers and fungal pathogens were mainly affected by stochastic processes such as drift. These findings provide novel insights into understanding soil microbial diversity maintenance mechanisms, and the analysis pipeline holds significant value for future research.

Funder

National Natural Science Foundation of China

Publisher

Wiley

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