Colonization ability and uniformity of resources and environmental factors determine biological homogenization of soil protists in human land‐use systems

Author:

Li Zhi‐Peng12ORCID,Shangguan Hua‐Yuan123ORCID,Yao Haifeng123ORCID,Yang Xiao‐Ru13ORCID,Mazei Yuri456ORCID,Zhu Biao7ORCID,Scheu Stefan89ORCID,Sun Xin123ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Key Laboratory of Urban Environment and Health, Ningbo Observation and Research Station, Fujian Key Laboratory of Watershed Ecology, Institute of Urban Environment Chinese Academy of Sciences Xiamen China

2. Zhejiang Key Laboratory of Urban Environmental Processes and Pollution Control CAS Haixi Industrial Technology Innovation Center in Beilun Ningbo China

3. University of Chinese Academy of Sciences Beijing China

4. Lomonosov Moscow State University Moscow Russia

5. Severtsov Institute of Ecology and Evolution Russian Academy of Sciences Moscow Russia

6. Shenzhen MSU‐BIT University Shenzhen China

7. Institute of Ecology and Ministry of Education Key Laboratory for Earth Surface Processes, College of Urban and Environmental Sciences Peking University Beijing China

8. J.F. Blumenbach Institute of Zoology and Anthropology University of Göttingen Göttingen Germany

9. Centre for Sustainable Land Use University of Göttingen Göttingen Germany

Abstract

AbstractHumans have substantially transformed the global land surface, resulting in the decline in variation in biotic communities across scales, a phenomenon known as “biological homogenization.” However, different biota are affected by biological homogenization to varying degrees, but this variation and the underlying mechanisms remain little studied, particularly in soil systems. To address this topic, we used metabarcoding to investigate the biogeography of soil protists and their prey/hosts (prokaryotes, fungi, and meso‐ and macrofauna) in three human land‐use ecosystem types (farmlands, residential areas, and parks) and natural forest ecosystems across subtropical and temperate regions in China. Our results showed that the degree of community homogenization largely differed between taxa and functional groups of soil protists, and was strongly and positively linked to their colonization ability of human land‐use systems. Removal analysis showed that the introduction of widespread, generalist taxa (OTUs, operational taxonomic units) rather than the loss of narrow‐ranged, specialist OTUs was the major cause of biological homogenization. This increase in generalist OTUs seemingly alleviated the negative impact of land use on specialist taxa, but carried the risk of losing functional diversity. Finally, homogenization of prey/host biota and environmental conditions were also important drivers of biological homogenization in human land‐use systems, with their importance being more pronounced in phagotrophic than parasitic and phototrophic protists. Overall, our study showed that the variation in biological homogenization strongly depends on the colonization ability of taxa in human land‐use systems, but is also affected by the homogenization of resources and environmental conditions. Importantly, biological homogenization is not the major cause of the decline in the diversity of soil protists, and conservation and study efforts should target at taxa highly sensitive to local extinction, such as parasites.

Funder

National Natural Science Foundation of China

National Key Research and Development Program of China

Publisher

Wiley

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