Abstract

Biogeographic patterns and drivers of soil microbial diversity have been extensively studied in the past few decades. However, most research has focused on the topsoil, while the subsoil is assumed to have microbial diversity patterns similar to those of the topsoil. Here we compared patterns and drivers of microbial alpha and beta diversity in and between topsoils (0 to 10 cm) and subsoils (30 to 50 cm) of temperate grasslands in Inner Mongolia of China, covering an ∼1,500-km transect along an aridity gradient. Counter to the conventional assumption, we find contrasting biogeographic patterns of diversity and influencing factors for different bacterial and archaeal groups and between depths. While bacterial diversity remains constant or increases with increasing aridity in topsoil and decreases in subsoil, archaeal diversity decreases in topsoil and remains constant in subsoil. Microbial diversity in the topsoil is most strongly influenced by aboveground vegetation and contemporary climate but is most strongly influenced by the factor historical temperature anomaly since the Last Glacial Maximum (LGM) and by soil pH in the subsoil. Moreover, the biogeographic patterns of topsoil-subsoil community dissimilarities vary for different microbial groups and are overall most strongly influenced by soil fertility differences between depths for bacteria and by contemporary climate for archaea. These findings suggest that diversity patterns observed in the topsoil may not be readily applied to the subsoil horizons. For the subsoil in particular, historical climate plays a vital role in the spatial variation of bacterial diversity. Overall, our study provides novel information for understanding and predicting soil microbial diversity patterns at depth.IMPORTANCE Exploring the biogeographic patterns of soil microbial diversity is critical for understanding mechanisms underlying the response of soil processes to climate change. Using top- and subsoils from an ∼1,500-km temperate grassland transect, we find divergent patterns of microbial diversity and its determinants in the topsoil versus the subsoil. Furthermore, we find important and direct legacy effects of historical climate change on the microbial diversity of subsoil yet indirect effects on topsoil. Our findings challenge the conventional assumption of similar geographic patterns of soil microbial diversity along soil profiles and help to improve our understanding of how soil microbial communities may respond to future climate change in different regions with various climate histories.

Highlights

  • Biogeographic patterns and drivers of soil microbial diversity have been extensively studied in the past few decades

  • Coupled with a comprehensive data set of edaphic, vegetation, and climatic variables, we evaluate the relative importance of different environmental factors driving microbial diversity at different soil depths and the microbial community dissimilarity between the top- and subsoils

  • This study aims to test the following three hypotheses. (i) The biogeographic patterns of diversity vary between bacteria and archaea and among different groups. (ii) Microbial diversity patterns in the subsoil do not entirely mimic those in the topsoil, and the microbial community dissimilarity between the top- and subsoils varies with environmental gradients. (iii) Microbial diversity is strongly influenced by contemporary climate and vegetation in the topsoil and by historical climate change in the subsoil

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Biogeographic patterns and drivers of soil microbial diversity have been extensively studied in the past few decades. Soil microbial diversity is influenced by a wide array of variables, including edaphic properties (e.g., soil pH and nutrients) [7,8,9,10], vegetation [11, 12], contemporary climate [13,14,15], and historical climate change [16,17,18], etc These variables may have differential controls on microbial diversity in the subsoil than in the topsoil due to the varied ranges and different orders of importance of these factors. In comparison to edaphic and contemporary climatic factors, the effect of historical climate change on soil microbial diversity patterns remains poorly understood

Objectives
Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call