Temperature-dependent trophic associations modulate soil bacterial communities along latitudinal gradients

Author:

Huang Xing1,Wang Jianjun2,Dumack Kenneth34,Anantharaman Karthik5,Ma Bin1,He Yan1,Liu Weiping67,Di Hongjie1,Li Yong1,Xu Jianming1

Affiliation:

1. Zhejiang Provincial Key Laboratory of Agricultural Resources and Environment, College of Environmental and Resource Sciences, Zhejiang University , Hangzhou 310058 , China

2. State Key Laboratory of Lake Science and Environment, Nanjing Institute of Geography and Limnology, Chinese Academy of Sciences , Nanjing 210008 , China

3. Institute of Zoology , Terrestrial Ecology, Cluster of Excellence on Plant Sciences (CEPLAS), , Cologne 50674 , Germany

4. University of Cologne , Terrestrial Ecology, Cluster of Excellence on Plant Sciences (CEPLAS), , Cologne 50674 , Germany

5. Department of Bacteriology, University of Wisconsin-Madison , Madison, WI 53705 , United States

6. MOE Key Laboratory of Environmental Remediation and Ecosystem Health , College of Environmental and Resource Sciences, , Hangzhou 310058 , China

7. Zhejiang University , College of Environmental and Resource Sciences, , Hangzhou 310058 , China

Abstract

Abstract Understanding the environmental and biological mechanisms shaping latitudinal patterns in microbial diversity is challenging in the field of ecology. Although multiple hypotheses have been proposed to explain these patterns, a consensus has rarely been reached. Here, we conducted a large-scale field survey and microcosm experiments to investigate how environmental heterogeneity and putative trophic interactions (exerted by protist–bacteria associations and T4-like virus–bacteria associations) affect soil bacterial communities along a latitudinal gradient. We found that the microbial latitudinal diversity was kingdom dependent, showing decreasing, clumped, and increasing trends in bacteria, protists, and T4-like viruses, respectively. Climatic and edaphic drivers played predominant roles in structuring the bacterial communities; the intensity of the climatic effect increased sharply from 30°N to 32°N, whereas the intensity of the edaphic effect remained stable. Biotic associations were also essential in shaping the bacterial communities, with protist–bacteria associations showing a quadratic distribution, whereas virus–bacteria associations were significant only at high latitudes. The microcosm experiments further revealed that the temperature component, which is affiliated with climate conditions, is the primary regulator of trophic associations along the latitudinal gradient. Overall, our study highlights a previously underestimated mechanism of how the putative biotic interactions influence bacterial communities and their response to environmental gradients.

Funder

Zhejiang Provincial Natural Science Foundation of China

Natural Science Foundation of China

National Key Research and Development Program of China

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

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