Plant landscape abundance and soil fungi modulate drought effects on plant-soil feedbacks

被引:3
|
作者
Xi, Nianxun [1 ,2 ]
Crawford, Kerri M. [3 ]
De Long, Jonathan R. [4 ]
机构
[1] Hainan Univ, Key Lab Genet & Germplasm Innovat Trop Special Fo, Minist Educ, Coll Forestry, Haikou, Hainan, Peoples R China
[2] Sun Yat Sen Univ, Sch Ecol, Guangzhou, Peoples R China
[3] Univ Houston, Dept Biol & Biochem, Houston, TX USA
[4] Louis Bolk Inst, Bunnik, Netherlands
基金
美国国家科学基金会;
关键词
drought; plant diversity maintenance; plant landscape abundance; plant-soil feedbacks; plant-soil interactions; specific pathogens; COMMUNITY STRUCTURE; DIVERSITY; DEPENDENCE; PATHOGENS; RESPONSES; DYNAMICS; PREDICTS; DENSITY; EVENTS; STRESS;
D O I
10.1111/oik.08836
中图分类号
Q14 [生态学(生物生态学)];
学科分类号
071012 ; 0713 ;
摘要
Plant-soil feedbacks (PSF) play an important role in determining plant community structure and dynamics. However, previous studies have provided mixed results for the relationship between PSF and plant landscape abundance (i.e. abundance across local communities). This may reflect the mediation of climate factors on PSF. Here, we tested how PSF of tree species varied with local abundances by growing seedlings in conspecific versus heterospecific soil and how simulated drought altered PSF-plant abundance relationships. Six tree species were selected and half of the seedlings were grown under ambient moisture conditions, while the others experienced a 2-month period of drought following 3-months of growth under ambient moisture conditions. Fungal communities in the rhizosphere soil were analysed using DNA amplicon sequencing to link shifts in soil fungi to the observed PSF. We found that drought reduced negative PSF for all plant species except one species (Lithocarpus lohangwu). In the drought treatments, PSF were positively correlated with the relative abundance of total putative pathogens, but negatively correlated with the proportion of unique pathogens (those pathogens that were present in conspecific soil rather than heterospecific soil, thereby potentially species-specific). In addition, we found that PSF only significantly predicted plant relative abundance in the drought treatment, indicating that abiotic stress made PSF a stronger predictor of plant landscape abundance. This finding also implies that future extreme drought events could promote the dominance of the abundant plant species, thereby leading to the loss of biodiversity. Collectively, our results provide evidence for microbial mechanisms of PSF and suggest that accounting for abiotic stress can make PSF a stronger predictor of plant landscape abundance due to the omnipresence of stress under natural conditions.
引用
收藏
页数:12
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Legacy effects of drought on plant-soil feedbacks and plant-plant interactions
    Kaisermann, Aurore
    de Vries, Franciska T.
    Griffiths, Robert I.
    Bardgett, Richard D.
    NEW PHYTOLOGIST, 2017, 215 (04) : 1413 - 1424
  • [2] Globally, plant-soil feedbacks are weak predictors of plant abundance
    Reinhart, Kurt O.
    Bauer, Jonathan T.
    McCarthy-Neumann, Sarah
    MacDougall, Andrew S.
    Hierro, Jose L.
    Chiuffo, Mariana C.
    Mangan, Scott A.
    Heinze, Johannes
    Bergmann, Joana
    Joshi, Jasmin
    Duncan, Richard P.
    Diez, Jeff M.
    Kardol, Paul
    Rutten, Gemma
    Fischer, Markus
    van der Putten, Wim H.
    Bezemer, Thiemo Martijn
    Klironomos, John
    ECOLOGY AND EVOLUTION, 2021, 11 (04): : 1756 - 1768
  • [3] The effect of prolonged drought legacies on plant-soil feedbacks
    Hassan, Kamrul
    Carrillo, Yolima
    Nielsen, Uffe N.
    JOURNAL OF VEGETATION SCIENCE, 2021, 32 (06)
  • [4] Negative plant-soil feedbacks increase with plant abundance, and are unchanged by competition
    Maron, John L.
    Smith, Alyssa Laney
    Ortega, Yvette K.
    Pearson, Dean E.
    Callaway, Ragan M.
    ECOLOGY, 2016, 97 (08) : 2055 - 2063
  • [5] Plant-soil feedbacks and invasive spread
    Levine, Jonathan M.
    Pachepsky, Elizaveta
    Kendall, Bruce E.
    Yelenik, Stephanie G.
    Hille Ris Lambers, Janneke
    ECOLOGY LETTERS, 2006, 9 (09) : 1005 - 1014
  • [6] Consequences of plant-soil feedbacks in invasion
    Suding, Katharine N.
    Harpole, William Stanley
    Fukami, Tadashi
    Kulmatiski, Andrew
    MacDougall, Andrew S.
    Stein, Claudia
    van der Putten, Wim H.
    JOURNAL OF ECOLOGY, 2013, 101 (02) : 298 - 308
  • [7] Fire modifies plant-soil feedbacks
    Warneke, Christopher R.
    Yelenik, Stephanie G.
    Brudvig, Lars A.
    ECOLOGY, 2023, 104 (05)
  • [8] The Role of Plant Litter in Driving Plant-Soil Feedbacks
    Veen, G. F.
    Fry, Ellen L.
    ten Hooven, Freddy C.
    Kardol, Paul
    Morrien, Elly
    De Long, Jonathan R.
    FRONTIERS IN ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE, 2019, 7
  • [9] Plant-soil feedback effects altered by aboveground herbivory explain plant species abundance in the landscape
    Heinze, Johannes
    Wacker, Alexander
    Kulmatiski, Andrew
    ECOLOGY, 2020, 101 (06)
  • [10] Effects of scale and contrast of spatial heterogeneity in plant-soil feedbacks on plant growth
    Huang, Lin
    Chen, Rong-Yi
    Xue, Wei
    Yu, Fei-Hai
    SCIENCE OF THE TOTAL ENVIRONMENT, 2023, 878