Abstract

Straw incorporation is typically employed to enhance the nutrient content of soil and promote crop growth in intensive agricultural systems. Despite studies regarding the effects of straw incorporation on soil microbial communities, the underlying mechanisms of its effect on community co-occurrence interactions and assembly processes remain poorly understood. Herein, soil samples with or without straw incorporation were collected across a latitudinal gradient from north to central China. We found that straw incorporation considerably altered the structure of soil microbial community. The relative abundance of bacterial Latescibacterota and fungal Mortierellomycota were higher in straw-amended soils owing to their ability to decompose straw residues. The co-occurrence network in straw-amended soil exhibited greater complexity, including more network connectivity and keystone species, and higher average degrees and clustering coefficients compared with the control sample network. The network robustness and vulnerability indices suggested that straw incorporation increased the microbial network stability. Normalized stochastic ratios demonstrated that the stochastic process was the dominant mechanisms shaping the assembly of microbial communities in straw-amended soils. Concurrently, null model analysis revealed that straw increased the contribution of dispersal limitation to the assembly of bacterial and fungal communities. The migration rate of the microbial community, obtained from Sloan neutral community model, was relatively low in straw-amended soil at all the sample sites, potentially indicating the great importance of dispersal limitation. These findings would enhance our understanding of the ecological patterns and interactions of soil microbial communities in response to straw incorporation.

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