Dominant plant species influence nematode richness by moderating understory diversity and microbial assemblages

被引:33
|
作者
Wang, Xiangtai [1 ]
Xiao, Sa [1 ]
Yang, Xiaoli [1 ]
Liu, Ziyang [1 ]
Zhou, Xianhui [1 ]
Du, Guozhen [1 ]
Zhang, Limin [1 ]
Guo, Aifeng [1 ]
Chen, Shuyan [1 ]
Nielsen, Uffe N. [2 ]
机构
[1] Lanzhou Univ, Sch Life Sci, State Key Lab Grassland & Agroecosyst, 222 Tianshui Rd, Lanzhou 730000, Gansu, Peoples R China
[2] Western Sydney Univ, Hawkesbury Inst Environm, Locked Bag 1797, Penrith, NSW 2751, Australia
来源
关键词
Community weighted mean; Microbial community; Nematode biomass; Structural equation modelling; Taxonomic richness; Tibetan plateau; FOOD WEBS; COMMUNITY STRUCTURE; SOIL NEMATODES; BIODIVERSITY; SHRUB; DESERTIFICATION; GRASSLANDS; IDENTITY; NITROGEN; REMOVAL;
D O I
10.1016/j.soilbio.2019.107566
中图分类号
S15 [土壤学];
学科分类号
0903 ; 090301 ;
摘要
Belowground assemblages are tightly linked to the aboveground vegetation, and often differ between plant species and vegetation types due to direct and indirect influences. However, the relative contribution of these direct and indirect influences of plants on belowground organisms differs among taxa and remains poorly understood. We established a plant removal experiment to better understand the effects of dominant plant species on nematode assemblages in an alpine meadow on the Tibetan plateau. We quantified plant community diversity, soil microbial assemblage richness and edaphic properties to explore how a dominant shrub and graminoids affect nematode assemblage structure and community-weighted mean (CWM) biomass using structural equation modelling (SEM). We found contrasting responses of nematode richness and CWM biomass of nematodes to the removal of shrubs and graminoids, including an intriguing interaction between them. The latter indicates that interactions between shrubs and graminoids modify nematode communities rather than their independent effects. Our results further suggest that dominant plants predominantly indirectly influence nematode richness through changes in biotic variables, specifically understory diversity, and bacterial and fungal richness. However, the dominant plants had no direct and limited indirect effects on CWM nematode biomass, which instead increased with soil nitrogen content, and decreased with soil pH, carbon and ammonium content. Our results provide insight into the relative role of direct and indirect influences on belowground assemblages and highlight the importance of dominant plants In maintaining belowground diversity. By contrast, edaphic properties appear more important to belowground biomass, likely reflecting longer term influences of the plant community on resource availability and quality. vegetation changes in grassland, such as reduced dominance of shrubs and graminoids, might therefore reduce soil biodiversity relatively rapidly but contribute to longer term impacts through changes in biogeochemical cycles.
引用
收藏
页数:8
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Soil nematode diversity depends on understory plant species richness in a subalpine forest
    Ma, Suhui
    Li, Yangang
    Fan, Fan
    Fang, Wenjing
    Cai, Qiong
    Xiong, Xinyu
    Zhang, Zhiming
    Zhu, Jiangling
    Ji, Chengjun
    APPLIED SOIL ECOLOGY, 2025, 207
  • [2] Influence of a dominant macrophyte, Juncus effusus, on wetland plant species richness, diversity, and community composition
    Gary N. Ervin
    Robert G. Wetzel
    Oecologia, 2002, 130 : 626 - 636
  • [3] Influence of a dominant macrophyte, Juncus effusus, on wetland plant species richness, diversity, and community composition
    Ervin, GN
    Wetzel, RG
    OECOLOGIA, 2002, 130 (04) : 626 - 636
  • [4] Who is who in the understory: the contribution of resident and transitory groups of species to plant richness in forest assemblages
    Gomes-Westphalen, Juliana Silva
    Borges Lins-e-Silva, Ana Carolina
    de Araujo, Francisca Soares
    REVISTA DE BIOLOGIA TROPICAL, 2012, 60 (03) : 1025 - 1040
  • [5] HYBRIDIZATION AMONG DOMINANT TREE SPECIES CORRELATES POSITIVELY WITH UNDERSTORY PLANT DIVERSITY
    Adams, Rachel I.
    Goldberry, Shaunna
    Whitham, Thomas G.
    Zinkgraf, Matthew S.
    Dirzo, Rodolfo
    AMERICAN JOURNAL OF BOTANY, 2011, 98 (10) : 1623 - 1632
  • [6] Effects of plant species richness and evenness on soil microbial community diversity and function
    Eric G. Lamb
    Nabla Kennedy
    Steven D. Siciliano
    Plant and Soil, 2011, 338 : 483 - 495
  • [7] Effects of plant species richness and evenness on soil microbial community diversity and function
    Lamb, Eric G.
    Kennedy, Nabla
    Siciliano, Steven D.
    PLANT AND SOIL, 2011, 338 (1-2) : 483 - 495
  • [8] Impact of forest fragmentation on understory plant species richness in Amazonia
    Benítez-Malvido, J
    Martínez-Ramos, M
    CONSERVATION BIOLOGY, 2003, 17 (02) : 389 - 400
  • [9] Selective influence of plant species on microbial diversity in the rhizosphere
    Grayston, SJ
    Wang, SQ
    Campbell, CD
    Edwards, AC
    SOIL BIOLOGY & BIOCHEMISTRY, 1998, 30 (03): : 369 - 378
  • [10] Influence of wildfire severity on plant and bird species richness, diversity and composition
    Liubov Volkova
    Julian Di Stefano
    Eliza K. Thompson
    Christopher J. Weston
    Discover Conservation, 2 (1):