Soil Microbial Community in 47 Chinese Forest Sites: Biogeographic Patterns and Links With Soil Dissolved Organic Matter

Author:

Zhang Zongxiao12,Zhang Qiang123,Wang Yinghui12,Zhang Peng12,Deng Guisen12,Sun Guodong12,Yang Yuanxi12,Jiang Ke4,Jiao Shuo5,Guo Xue6,Wang Junjian2ORCID

Affiliation:

1. State Environmental Protection Key Laboratory of Integrated Surface Water‐Groundwater Pollution Control School of Environmental Science and Engineering Southern University of Science and Technology Shenzhen China

2. Guangdong Provincial Key Laboratory of Soil and Groundwater Pollution Control Southern University of Science and Technology Shenzhen China

3. School of Environment Harbin Institute of Technology Harbin China

4. Key Laboratory of Coastal Environment and Resources of Zhejiang Province School of Engineering Westlake University Hangzhou China

5. State Key Laboratory of Crop Stress Biology in Arid Areas Shaanxi Key Laboratory of Agricultural and Environmental Microbiology College of Life Sciences Northwest A&F University Yangling China

6. State Key Joint Laboratory of Environment Simulation and Pollution Control School of Environment Tsinghua University Beijing China

Abstract

AbstractSoils in forested ecosystems are extremely heterogeneous and represent a critical component of terrestrial ecosystems. Despite their substantial ecological value, the geographic characteristics, ecological processes, and coexistence of microbial communities in forest soils remain poorly understood. Here, we investigated the biodiversity dynamics, environmental influences, community assembly, and co‐occurrence patterns of bacterial and fungal communities in surface and subsurface soils across 47 Chinese forest sites. The biogeographic characteristics determined using high‐throughput sequencing data sets revealed evident spatial patterns of bacterial and fungal α and β diversity, assembly processes, and co‐occurrence relationship, with greater variation in the bacterial than in fungal communities. Both fungal and bacterial communities showed significant spatial separations regulated by community assembly processes, co‐occurrence patterns, and soil variables. The microbial dissimilarity was lower in high latitudes than in low latitudes, which was consistent with the lower deterministic processes and relatively higher co‐occurrence associations in high latitudes than in low latitudes. Additionally, there were significant associations of soil dissolved organic matter (DOM) characteristics (e.g., its content, aromaticity, and molecular weight) with biodiversity dissimilarities, microbial assembly process balances, and microbial co‐occurrence relationships in bacterial and fungal communities; they clearly indicate the key role of DOM in regulating microbial biogeographic patterns in forest soil ecosystems. Collectively, our study enhances the understanding of biogeographic patterns and coexistence theories in forest soil microbial ecosystems.

Publisher

American Geophysical Union (AGU)

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