Microbes in reconstructive restoration: Divergence in constructed and natural tree island soil fungi affects tree growth

IF 4.3 2区 环境科学与生态学 Q1 ECOLOGY Ecological Applications Pub Date : 2025-02-14 DOI:10.1002/eap.70007
Kasey N. Kiesewetter, Amanda H. Rawstern, Eric Cline, Gina R. Ortiz, Fabiola Santamaria, Carlos Coronado-Molina, Fred H. Sklar, Michelle E. Afkhami
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Abstract

As ecosystems face unprecedented change and habitat loss, pursuing comprehensive and resilient habitat restoration will be integral to protecting and maintaining natural areas and the services they provide. Microbiomes offer an important avenue for improving restoration efforts as they are integral to ecosystem health and functioning. Despite microbiomes' importance, unresolved knowledge gaps hinder their inclusion in restoration efforts. Here, we address two critical gaps in understanding microbial roles in restoration—fungal microbiomes' importance in “reconstructive” restoration efforts and how management and restoration decisions interactively impact fungal communities and their cascading effects on trees. We combined field surveys, microbiome sequencing, and greenhouse experiments to determine how reconstructing an iconic landscape feature—tree islands—in the highly imperiled Everglades impacts fungal microbiomes and fungal effects on native tree species compared with their natural counterparts under different proposed hydrological management regimes. Constructed islands used in this research were built from peat soil and limestone collected from deep sloughs and levees nearby the restoration sites in 2003, providing 18 years for microbiome assembly on constructed islands. We found that while fungal microbiomes from natural and constructed tree islands exhibited similar diversity and richness, they differed significantly in community composition. These compositional differences arose mainly from changes to which fungal taxa were present on the islands rather than changes in relative abundances. Surprisingly, ~50% of fungal hub taxa (putative keystone fungi) from natural islands were missing on constructed islands, suggesting that differences in community composition of constructed island could be important for microbiome stability and function. The differences in fungal composition between natural and constructed islands had important consequences for tree growth. Specifically, these compositional differences interacted with hydrological regime (treatments simulating management strategies) to affect woody growth across the four tree species in our experiment. Taken together, our results demonstrate that reconstructing a landscape feature without consideration of microbiomes can result in diverging fungal communities that are likely to interact with management decisions leading to meaningful consequences for foundational primary producers. Our results recommend cooperation between restoration practitioners and ecologists to evaluate opportunities for active management and restoration of microbiomes during future reconstructive restoration.

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重建修复中的微生物:人工和天然树岛土壤真菌的差异影响树木生长
随着生态系统面临前所未有的变化和栖息地的丧失,寻求全面和有弹性的栖息地恢复将是保护和维护自然区域及其提供的服务不可或缺的一部分。微生物群是生态系统健康和功能的重要组成部分,为改善恢复工作提供了重要途径。尽管微生物组很重要,但尚未解决的知识空白阻碍了它们在恢复工作中的纳入。在这里,我们解决了理解微生物在恢复中的作用的两个关键空白-真菌微生物组在“重建”恢复工作中的重要性,以及管理和恢复决策如何相互影响真菌群落及其对树木的级联效应。我们将实地调查、微生物组测序和温室实验相结合,以确定在不同拟议的水文管理制度下,在高度危险的沼泽地重建标志性景观特征-树岛如何影响真菌微生物组和真菌对本地树种的影响。本研究中使用的人工岛屿是由2003年从修复地点附近的深淤泥和堤防中收集的泥炭土和石灰石建造的,为人工岛屿上的微生物群组装提供了18年的时间。结果表明,天然人工岛和人工人工岛真菌微生物群落具有相似的多样性和丰富度,但在群落组成上存在显著差异。这些组成上的差异主要是由于岛上真菌类群的变化,而不是相对丰度的变化。令人惊讶的是,约50%的天然岛屿真菌中心分类群(假定的关键真菌)在人工岛屿上缺失,这表明人工岛屿群落组成的差异可能对微生物组的稳定性和功能很重要。天然岛屿和人工岛屿真菌组成的差异对树木生长有重要影响。具体来说,在我们的实验中,这些成分差异与水文状况(模拟管理策略的处理)相互作用,影响了四种树种的木材生长。综上所述,我们的研究结果表明,在不考虑微生物组的情况下重建景观特征可能导致真菌群落的分化,这些真菌群落可能与管理决策相互作用,从而对基础初级生产者产生有意义的后果。我们的研究结果建议修复从业者和生态学家之间的合作,以评估在未来的重建修复中主动管理和恢复微生物组的机会。
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来源期刊
Ecological Applications
Ecological Applications 环境科学-环境科学
CiteScore
9.50
自引率
2.00%
发文量
268
审稿时长
6 months
期刊介绍: The pages of Ecological Applications are open to research and discussion papers that integrate ecological science and concepts with their application and implications. Of special interest are papers that develop the basic scientific principles on which environmental decision-making should rest, and those that discuss the application of ecological concepts to environmental problem solving, policy, and management. Papers that deal explicitly with policy matters are welcome. Interdisciplinary approaches are encouraged, as are short communications on emerging environmental challenges.
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