Environmental preferences of soil microbial attributes for long-term nitrogen and acid addition: From phylotype to community

IF 9.8 1区 农林科学 Q1 SOIL SCIENCE Soil Biology & Biochemistry Pub Date : 2024-08-03 DOI:10.1016/j.soilbio.2024.109541
Liji Wu , Ying Wu , Yuhui Meng , Bing Wang , Yongfei Bai , Dima Chen
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Abstract

The impact of human-induced nitrogen (N) enrichment on microbial diversity has been extensively studied, with two main hypotheses proposed: soil N availability and soil acidification. However, the specific roles of these two hypotheses and their environmental preferences on soil bacterial and fungal communities are not fully understood. By conducting two independent experiments (a 16-year N and a 6-year acid addition) in a temperate semi-arid grassland, we tested the responses of soil microbial attributes (e.g., richness and relative abundance) at various levels (community, phylum/class, and phylotype) to N and acid addition. At the community level, our results showed that both N and acid addition had a negative effect on the richness of the whole, dominant, and rare bacterial communities; N enrichment only decreased the richness of the dominant fungal community, while acid addition decreased the richness of the whole, dominant, and rare fungal communities. By categorizing the microbial attributes into nine environmental preferences based on their responses to N and acid addition, we found that most bacterial phyla were associated with low N availability and high pH preferences, while most fungal classes had other environmental preferences. Most dominant bacterial phylotypes were linked to low N availability and high pH preferences, while most dominant fungal phylotypes were associated with other environmental preferences and high pH preferences. Conversely, most rare bacterial and fungal phylotypes were linked to other environmental preferences. Our experiments revealed that the decline in bacterial richness caused by N enrichment was predominantly due to their sensitivity to soil acidification, while fungal richness remained largely unaltered. By pinpointing distinct microbial attributes at different levels in response to N and acid addition, our findings could potentially forecast how soil microorganisms will react to future global N deposition.

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土壤微生物属性对长期添加氮和酸的环境偏好:从系统型到群落
人类引起的氮(N)富集对微生物多样性的影响已被广泛研究,并提出了两个主要假说:土壤氮可用性和土壤酸化。然而,这两种假说的具体作用及其对土壤细菌和真菌群落的环境偏好尚未完全明了。通过在温带半干旱草地上进行两项独立实验(16 年添加氮和 6 年添加酸),我们测试了不同层次(群落、门/类和系统型)的土壤微生物属性(如丰富度和相对丰度)对添加氮和酸的响应。在群落水平上,我们的研究结果表明,氮和酸的添加对整个细菌群落、优势细菌群落和稀有细菌群落的丰富度都有负面影响;氮的富集只降低了优势真菌群落的丰富度,而酸的添加则降低了整个真菌群落、优势真菌群落和稀有真菌群落的丰富度。根据微生物对添加氮和酸的反应,我们将微生物属性分为九种环境偏好,发现大多数细菌门类与低氮可用性和高 pH 偏好有关,而大多数真菌门类具有其他环境偏好。大多数优势细菌系统型与低氮可用性和高 pH 值偏好有关,而大多数优势真菌系统型与其他环境偏好和高 pH 值偏好有关。相反,大多数稀有细菌和真菌系统型与其他环境偏好有关。我们的实验表明,氮富集导致细菌丰富度下降主要是由于它们对土壤酸化的敏感性,而真菌的丰富度基本保持不变。通过确定不同层次的微生物属性对氮和酸添加的反应,我们的研究结果有可能预测土壤微生物对未来全球氮沉积的反应。
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来源期刊
Soil Biology & Biochemistry
Soil Biology & Biochemistry 农林科学-土壤科学
CiteScore
16.90
自引率
9.30%
发文量
312
审稿时长
49 days
期刊介绍: Soil Biology & Biochemistry publishes original research articles of international significance focusing on biological processes in soil and their applications to soil and environmental quality. Major topics include the ecology and biochemical processes of soil organisms, their effects on the environment, and interactions with plants. The journal also welcomes state-of-the-art reviews and discussions on contemporary research in soil biology and biochemistry.
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