Effects of plant taxonomic position on soil nematode communities in Antarctica

Author:

Zhang Anning12,Song Hongxian1,Liu Ziyang2,Cui Hanwen2,Ding Haitao3,Chen Shuyan1ORCID,Xiao Sa2,An Lizhe1,Cardoso Pedro4

Affiliation:

1. Key Laboratory of Cell Activities and Stress Adaptations Ministry of Education, School of Life Sciences Lanzhou University Lanzhou China

2. State Key Laboratory of Herbage Improvement and Grassland Agro‐ecosystems, College of Ecology Lanzhou University Lanzhou China

3. Antarctic Great Wall Ecology National Observation and Research Station, Polar Research Institute of China Ministry of Natural Resources Shanghai China

4. Laboratory for Integrative Biodiversity Research, Finnish Museum of Natural History Luomus University of Helsinki Helsinki Finland

Abstract

AbstractAntarctica terrestrial ecosystems are facing the most threats from global climate change, which is altering plant composition greatly. These transformations may cause major reshuffling of soil community composition, including functional traits and diversity, and therefore affect ecosystem processes in Antarctica. We used high‐throughput sequencing analysis to investigate soil nematodes under 3 dominant plant functional groups (lichens, mosses, and vascular plants) and bare ground in the Antarctic region. We calculated functional diversity of nematodes based on their diet, life histories, and body mass with kernel density n‐dimensional hypervolumes. We also calculated taxonomic and functional beta diversity of the nematode communities based on Jaccard dissimilarity. The presence of plants had no significant effect on the taxonomic richness of nematodes but significantly increased nematode functional richness. The presence of plants also significantly decreased taxonomic beta diversity (homogenization). Only mosses and vascular plants decreased nematode functional beta diversity, which was mostly due to a decreased effect of the richness difference component. The presence of plants also increased the effect of deterministic processes potentially because environmental filtering created conditions favorable to nematodes at low trophic levels with short life histories and small body size. Increasing plant cover in the Antarctic due to climate change may lead to increased diversity of nematode species that can use the scarce resources and nematode taxonomic and functional homogenization. In a future under climate change, community restructuring in the region is possible.

Funder

National Natural Science Foundation of China

Natural Science Foundation of Gansu Province

Publisher

Wiley

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