Soil microbial influences over coexistence potential in multispecies plant communities in a subtropical forest

Author:

Wang Weitao1,Wu Hangyu1,Wu Tingting1,Luo Zijing1,Lin Wei1,Liu Hanlun1ORCID,Xiao Junli1,Luo Wenqi1,Li Yuanzhi1ORCID,Wang Youshi1,Song Chuliang2ORCID,Kandlikar Gaurav34ORCID,Chu Chengjin1

Affiliation:

1. State Key Laboratory of Biocontrol, School of Ecology and School of Life Sciences Sun Yat‐sen University Guangzhou China

2. Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology Princeton University Princeton New Jersey USA

3. Divisions of Biological Sciences and Plant Sciences & Technology University of Missouri Columbia Missouri USA

4. Division of Biological Sciences Louisiana State University Baton Rouge Louisiana USA

Abstract

AbstractSoil microbes have long been recognized to substantially affect the coexistence of pairwise plant species across terrestrial ecosystems. However, projecting their impacts on the coexistence of multispecies plant systems remains a pressing challenge. To address this challenge, we conducted a greenhouse experiment with 540 seedlings of five tree species in a subtropical forest in China and evaluated microbial effects on multispecies coexistence using the structural method, which quantifies how the structure of species interactions influences the likelihood for multiple species to persist. Specifically, we grew seedlings alone or with competitors in different microbial contexts and fitted individual biomass to a population dynamic model to calculate intra‐ and interspecific interaction strength with and without soil microbes. We then used these interaction structures to calculate two metrics of multispecies coexistence, structural niche differences (which promote coexistence) and structural fitness differences (which drive exclusion), for all possible communities comprising two to five plant species. We found that soil microbes generally increased both the structural niche and fitness differences across all communities, with a much stronger effect on structural fitness differences. A further examination of functional traits between plant species pairs found that trait differences are stronger predictors of structural niche differences than of structural fitness differences, and that soil microbes have the potential to change trait‐mediated plant interactions. Our findings underscore that soil microbes strongly influence the coexistence of multispecies plant systems, and also add to the experimental evidence that the influence is more on fitness differences rather than on niche differences.

Funder

National Natural Science Foundation of China

Publisher

Wiley

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