Soil microbial influences over coexistence potential in multispecies plant communities in a subtropical forest

IF 4.4 2区 环境科学与生态学 Q1 ECOLOGY Ecology Pub Date : 2024-09-13 DOI:10.1002/ecy.4415
Weitao Wang, Hangyu Wu, Tingting Wu, Zijing Luo, Wei Lin, Hanlun Liu, Junli Xiao, Wenqi Luo, Yuanzhi Li, Youshi Wang, Chuliang Song, Gaurav Kandlikar, Chengjin Chu
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Abstract

Soil microbes have long been recognized to substantially affect the coexistence of pairwise plant species across terrestrial ecosystems. However, projecting their impacts on the coexistence of multispecies plant systems remains a pressing challenge. To address this challenge, we conducted a greenhouse experiment with 540 seedlings of five tree species in a subtropical forest in China and evaluated microbial effects on multispecies coexistence using the structural method, which quantifies how the structure of species interactions influences the likelihood for multiple species to persist. Specifically, we grew seedlings alone or with competitors in different microbial contexts and fitted individual biomass to a population dynamic model to calculate intra‐ and interspecific interaction strength with and without soil microbes. We then used these interaction structures to calculate two metrics of multispecies coexistence, structural niche differences (which promote coexistence) and structural fitness differences (which drive exclusion), for all possible communities comprising two to five plant species. We found that soil microbes generally increased both the structural niche and fitness differences across all communities, with a much stronger effect on structural fitness differences. A further examination of functional traits between plant species pairs found that trait differences are stronger predictors of structural niche differences than of structural fitness differences, and that soil microbes have the potential to change trait‐mediated plant interactions. Our findings underscore that soil microbes strongly influence the coexistence of multispecies plant systems, and also add to the experimental evidence that the influence is more on fitness differences rather than on niche differences.
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土壤微生物对亚热带森林多物种植物群落共存潜力的影响
长期以来,人们一直认为土壤微生物对陆地生态系统中成对植物物种的共存有着重大影响。然而,预测土壤微生物对多物种植物系统共存的影响仍然是一项紧迫的挑战。为了应对这一挑战,我们在中国的亚热带森林中用五种树种的 540 株幼苗进行了温室实验,并使用结构法评估了微生物对多物种共存的影响。具体来说,我们在不同的微生物环境中单独或与竞争者一起培育幼苗,并将个体生物量拟合到种群动态模型中,以计算有无土壤微生物的种内和种间相互作用强度。然后,我们利用这些相互作用结构来计算多物种共存的两个指标,即结构性生态位差异(促进共存)和结构性适应性差异(驱动排斥),适用于所有可能的群落,包括 2 到 5 个植物物种。我们发现,在所有群落中,土壤微生物一般都会增加结构生态位和适应性差异,其中对结构适应性差异的影响更大。对植物物种对之间功能性状的进一步研究发现,性状差异对结构生态位差异的预测作用强于对结构适应性差异的预测作用,土壤微生物有可能改变性状介导的植物相互作用。我们的研究结果突出表明,土壤微生物对多物种植物系统的共存有很大影响,同时也补充了实验证据,即这种影响更多的是对适应性差异的影响,而不是对生态位差异的影响。
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来源期刊
Ecology
Ecology 环境科学-生态学
CiteScore
8.30
自引率
2.10%
发文量
332
审稿时长
3 months
期刊介绍: Ecology publishes articles that report on the basic elements of ecological research. Emphasis is placed on concise, clear articles documenting important ecological phenomena. The journal publishes a broad array of research that includes a rapidly expanding envelope of subject matter, techniques, approaches, and concepts: paleoecology through present-day phenomena; evolutionary, population, physiological, community, and ecosystem ecology, as well as biogeochemistry; inclusive of descriptive, comparative, experimental, mathematical, statistical, and interdisciplinary approaches.
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FRUGIVORY CAMTRAP: A dataset of plant–animal interactions recorded with camera traps Soil microbial influences over coexistence potential in multispecies plant communities in a subtropical forest Analysis of resting status reveals distinct elevational variation in metabolisms of lizards. Minimum habitat size required to detect new rare species Root and biomass allocation traits predict changes in plant species and communities over four decades of global change.
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