Affiliation:
1. Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology University of California Irvine California USA
2. BioScience Division Los Alamos National Laboratory Los Alamos New Mexico USA
3. Department of Earth System Science University of California Irvine California USA
Abstract
AbstractChanges in substrate quality driven by climate, land use, or other forms of global change may represent a strong selective force on microbial communities. Invasion of new taxa into a community through dispersal, evolution, or recolonization could impact the outcome of this environmental selection. Here, we simulated substrate change with a trait‐based model of microbial litter decomposition (DEMENTpy) to assess the legacy effects of past substrate quality and the impact of selection by a new substrate on community decomposition activity. Simulations were run with different levels of invasion, including invasion from communities long‐adapted to the new substrate. Legacy effects were evident with substrate change for native communities differing in composition. Protein was the only substrate that exerted a strong enough selective force to affect community composition. Legacy effects disappeared when invaders came from substrates similar to the new substrate. Together, our simulations demonstrate that substrate quality changes associated with global change can lead to legacy effects on substrate degradation. In decomposing plant litter, such legacy effects can occur if substrate inputs shift to higher protein content and if invasion is low.
Funder
Los Alamos National Laboratory
H2020 Marie Skłodowska-Curie Actions
Cited by
1 articles.
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