| Literature DB >> 30788871 |
Mengxin Zhao1,2, Bo Sun3, Linwei Wu2,4, Feng Wang3,5, Chongqing Wen4,6, Mengmeng Wang2, Yuting Liang3, Lauren Hale4, Jizhong Zhou2,4,7, Yunfeng Yang2.
Abstract
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.Entities:
Keywords: carbon-decomposing genes; climate change; high-throughput sequencing; soil microbial community; soil transplantation
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30788871 DOI: 10.1111/mec.15053
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mol Ecol ISSN: 0962-1083 Impact factor: 6.185