Elevational characteristics of soil bacterial community and their responses to soil translocation at a mountainside in northwest Sichuan, China
-
Published:2023-10-20
Issue:1
Volume:13
Page:
-
ISSN:2045-2322
-
Container-title:Scientific Reports
-
language:en
-
Short-container-title:Sci Rep
Author:
Wang Xuemei,Huang Tianzhi,Li Yunyun,Zhao Guang,Zhao Jixia
Abstract
AbstractHow the soil bacterial communities vary with elevation is context-dependent, and the effect of soil translocation between elevations on bacterial community structure and metabolic function was not fully understood yet. Here, the bacterial community composition and diversity at five elevations along a 1600–3000 m elevation gradient on a mountainside in northwest Sichuan were characterized, and the responses of soil bacterial community to simulated climate changes were further studied by soil translocation reciprocally at three elevations for 12 months. Significant differences were found in soil temperature and moisture at different elevations, but there was no observed change in bacterial alpha diversity. The relative abundance of bacterial phyla was significantly different among the five elevations except for Proteobacteria (the dominant bacterial phyla in five elevation), and most bacterial phyla correlated with soil temperature, moisture, pH and soil bulk density. The direct effect of soil properties (pH, soil nutrients and soil bulk density) on soil bacterial community was stronger than the direct effect of temperature and moisture. Soil translocation changed the relative abundance of some bacterial phyla, and taxonomic groups with significant changes were mainly non-dominant phyla rather than the dominant phyla. Metabolism was the primary function of bacterial community at all elevations, which accounted for ~ 80% of relative abundance, and soil translocation had little effect on metabolic function. These findings indicated that soil bacterial dominant taxa and soil bacterial metabolic functions are relatively stable, which contribute to the stability of the ecosystem when response to the climate change in the future.
Funder
National Natural Science Foundation of China open fund project of Ecological Security and Protection Key Laboratory of Sichuan Province, Mianyang Normal University
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Subject
Multidisciplinary
Reference51 articles.
1. Bardgett, R. D. & van der Putten, W. H. Belowground biodiversity and ecosystem functioning. Nature 515, 505–511 (2014). 2. Tu, J., Qiao, J., Zhu, Z. W., Li, P. & Wu, L. C. Soil bacterial community responses to long-term fertilizer treatments in Paulownia plantations in subtropical China. Appl. Soil Ecol. 124, 317–326 (2018). 3. Nottingham, A. T., Fierer, N., Turner, B. L., Whitaker, J., Ostle, N. J., McNamara, N. P., Bardgett, R. D., Leff, J. W., Salinas, N., Ccahuana, A. J. Q., Silman, M. & Meir, P. Temperature drives plant and soil microbial diversity patterns across an elevation gradient from the Andes to the Amazon. BioRxiv, 079996 (2016). 4. Singh, D., Lee-Cruz, L., Kim, W. S., Kerfahi, D. & Adams, J. M. Strong elevational trends in soil bacterial community composition on Mt. Halla, South Korea. Soil Biol. Biochem. 68, 140–149 (2014). 5. Li, Y. et al. Soil bacterial community responses to warming and grazing in a Tibetan alpine meadow. FEMS Microbiol. Ecol. 92(1), fiv152 (2016).
|
|