Dissimilar responses of fungal and bacterial communities to soil transplantation simulating abrupt climate changes

被引:16
作者
Zhao, Mengxin [1 ,2 ]
Sun, Bo [3 ]
Wu, Linwei [2 ,4 ,5 ]
Wang, Feng [3 ,6 ]
Wen, Chongqing [4 ,5 ,7 ]
Wang, Mengmeng [2 ]
Liang, Yuting [3 ]
Hale, Lauren [4 ,5 ]
Zhou, Jizhong [2 ,4 ,5 ,8 ]
Yang, Yunfeng [2 ]
机构
[1] Chinese Acad Agr Sci, Inst Plant Protect, State Key Lab Biol Plant Dis & Insect Pests, Beijing, Peoples R China
[2] Tsinghua Univ, Sch Environm, State Key Joint Lab Environm Simulat & Pollut Con, Beijing, Peoples R China
[3] Chinese Acad Sci, Inst Soil Sci, State Key Lab Soil & Sustainable Agr, Nanjing, Peoples R China
[4] Univ Oklahoma, Dept Microbiol & Plant Biol, Inst Environm Genom, Norman, OK 73019 USA
[5] Univ Oklahoma, Sch Civil Engn & Environm Sci, Norman, OK 73019 USA
[6] Ningbo Acad Agr Sci, Ningbo, Zhejiang, Peoples R China
[7] Guangdong Ocean Univ, Fisheries Coll, Zhanjiang, Peoples R China
[8] Lawrence Berkeley Natl Lab, Earth & Environm Sci, Berkeley, CA USA
基金
美国国家科学基金会; 中国博士后科学基金;
关键词
carbon-decomposing genes; climate change; high-throughput sequencing; soil microbial community; soil transplantation; ORGANIC-MATTER; ATTACHED BACTERIA; COLUMBIA RIVER; PH; TEMPERATURE; GRASSLAND; GRADIENT; MECHANISMS; REGRESSION; ADAPTATION;
D O I
10.1111/mec.15053
中图分类号
Q5 [生物化学]; Q7 [分子生物学];
学科分类号
071010 ; 081704 ;
摘要
Both fungi and bacteria play essential roles in regulating soil carbon cycling. To predict future carbon stability, it is imperative to understand their responses to environmental changes, which is subject to large uncertainty. As current global warming is causing range shifts toward higher latitudes, we conducted three reciprocal soil transplantation experiments over large transects in 2005 to simulate abrupt climate changes. Six years after soil transplantation, fungal biomass of transplanted soils showed a general pattern of changes from donor sites to destination, which were more obvious in bare fallow soils than in maize cropped soils. Strikingly, fungal community compositions were clustered by sites, demonstrating that fungi of transplanted soils acclimatized to the destination environment. Several fungal taxa displayed sharp changes in relative abundance, including Podospora, Chaetomium, Mortierella and Phialemonium. In contrast, bacterial communities remained largely unchanged. Consistent with the important role of fungi in affecting soil carbon cycling, 8.1%-10.0% of fungal genes encoding carbon-decomposing enzymes were significantly (p < 0.01) increased as compared with those from bacteria (5.7%-8.4%). To explain these observations, we found that fungal occupancy across samples was mainly determined by annual average air temperature and rainfall, whereas bacterial occupancy was more closely related to soil conditions, which remained stable 6 years after soil transplantation. Together, these results demonstrate dissimilar response patterns and resource partitioning between fungi and bacteria, which may have considerable consequences for ecosystem-scale carbon cycling.
引用
收藏
页码:1842 / 1856
页数:15
相关论文
共 74 条
  • [1] Community analysis of aggregated bacteria in southern Lake Baikal
    Ahn, T. S.
    Kim, O. S.
    Joh, K. S.
    Spiglazov, L. P.
    Drucker, V. V.
    Hong, S. -H.
    [J]. HYDROBIOLOGIA, 2006, 568 (Suppl 1) : 5 - 8
  • [2] Abrupt climate change
    Alley, RB
    Marotzke, J
    Nordhaus, WD
    Overpeck, JT
    Peteet, DM
    Pielke, RA
    Pierrehumbert, RT
    Rhines, PB
    Stocker, TF
    Talley, LD
    Wallace, JM
    [J]. SCIENCE, 2003, 299 (5615) : 2005 - 2010
  • [3] Bacteria and Fungi Respond Differently to Multifactorial Climate Change in a Temperate Heathland, Traced with 13C-Glycine and FACE CO2
    Andresen, Louise C.
    Dungait, Jennifer A. J.
    Bol, Roland
    Selsted, Merete B.
    Ambus, Per
    Michelsen, Anders
    [J]. PLOS ONE, 2014, 9 (01):
  • [4] Active and total microbial communities in forest soil are largely different and highly stratified during decomposition
    Baldrian, Petr
    Kolarik, Miroslav
    Stursova, Martina
    Kopecky, Jan
    Valaskova, Vendula
    Vetrovsky, Tomaas
    Zifcakova, Lucia
    Snajdr, Jaroslav
    Ridl, Jakub
    Vlcek, Cestmir
    Voriskova, Jana
    [J]. ISME JOURNAL, 2012, 6 (02) : 248 - 258
  • [5] Linking microbial community composition and soil processes in a California annual grassland and mixed-conifer forest
    Balser, TC
    Firestone, MK
    [J]. BIOGEOCHEMISTRY, 2005, 73 (02) : 395 - 415
  • [6] Why are some microbes more ubiquitous than others? Predicting the habitat breadth of soil bacteria
    Barberan, Albert
    Ramirez, Kelly S.
    Leff, Jonathan W.
    Bradford, Mark A.
    Wall, Diana H.
    Fierer, Noah
    [J]. ECOLOGY LETTERS, 2014, 17 (07) : 794 - 802
  • [7] Responses of soil bacterial and fungal communities to extreme desiccation and rewetting
    Barnard, Romain L.
    Osborne, Catherine A.
    Firestone, Mary K.
    [J]. ISME JOURNAL, 2013, 7 (11) : 2229 - 2241
  • [8] Major and comparable roles for free-living and attached bacteria in the degradation of Phaeocystis-derived organic matter in Belgian coastal waters of the North Sea
    Becquevort, S
    Rousseau, V
    Lancelot, C
    [J]. AQUATIC MICROBIAL ECOLOGY, 1998, 14 (01) : 39 - 48
  • [9] BERGER U, 1994, P SOC PHOTO-OPT INS, V2249, P159
  • [10] Phylogenetic Distribution of Potential Cellulases in Bacteria
    Berlemont, Renaud
    Martiny, Adam C.
    [J]. APPLIED AND ENVIRONMENTAL MICROBIOLOGY, 2013, 79 (05) : 1545 - 1554