Abstract

The ecological mechanisms driving community succession are widely debated, particularly for microorganisms. While successional soil microbial communities are known to undergo predictable changes in structure concomitant with shifts in a variety of edaphic properties, the causal mechanisms underlying these patterns are poorly understood. Thus, to specifically isolate how nutrients – important drivers of plant succession – affect soil microbial succession, we established a full factorial nitrogen (N) and phosphorus (P) fertilization plot experiment in recently deglaciated (∼3 years since exposure), unvegetated soils of the Puca Glacier forefield in Southeastern Peru. We evaluated soil properties and examined bacterial community composition in plots before and one year after fertilization. Fertilized soils were then compared to samples from three reference successional transects representing advancing stages of soil development ranging from 5 years to 85 years since exposure. We found that a single application of +NP fertilizer caused the soil bacterial community structure of the three-year old soils to most resemble the 85-year old soils after one year. Despite differences in a variety of soil edaphic properties between fertilizer plots and late successional soils, bacterial community composition of +NP plots converged with late successional communities. Thus, our work suggests a mechanism for microbial succession whereby changes in resource availability drive shifts in community composition, supporting a role for nutrient colimitation in primary succession. These results suggest that nutrients alone, independent of other edaphic factors that change with succession, act as an important control over soil microbial community development, greatly accelerating the rate of succession.

Highlights

  • Deglaciated forefields have been valuable model systems for developing and testing theories of succession and have greatly enhanced our understanding of the relationship between community structure and function during ecosystem development [1,2,3]

  • Fertilizer treatments are known to elicit changes in soil microbial community structure and function in more developed ecosystems [14,15] suggesting that nutrient availability may be important in controlling successional changes in microbial community composition

  • Our analyses demonstrate that a single +NP application caused the bacterial community structure of the 3year-old barren soils to converge with the structure of 85-year-old vegetated soils after only one year

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Summary

Introduction

Deglaciated forefields have been valuable model systems for developing and testing theories of succession and have greatly enhanced our understanding of the relationship between community structure and function during ecosystem development [1,2,3]. Shifts in soil nutrient pools, including increases in available nitrogen (N) and phosphorus (P), have been well documented along early primary successional chronosequences [4,5,6] and have been shown to correlate with changes in plant community succession [1,7,8].

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