Abstract

In the context of secondary forest succession, aboveground-belowground interactions are known to affect the dynamics and functional structure of plant communities. However, the links between soil microbial communities, soil abiotic properties, plant functional traits in the case of semi-arid and arid ecosystems, are unclear. In this study, we investigated the changes in soil microbial species diversity and community composition, and the corresponding effects of soil abiotic properties and plant functional traits, during a ≥150-year secondary forest succession on the Loess Plateau, which represents a typical semi-arid ecosystem in China. Plant community fragments were assigned to six successional stages: 1–4, 4–8, 8–15, 15–50, 50–100, and 100–150 years after abandonment. Bacterial and fungal communities were analyzed by high-throughput sequencing of the V4 hypervariable region of the 16S rRNA gene and the internal transcribed spacer (ITS2) region of the rRNA operon, respectively. A multivariate variation-partitioning approach was used to estimate the contributions of soil properties and plant traits to the observed microbial community composition. We found considerable differences in bacterial and fungal community compositions between the early (S1–S3) and later (S4–S6) successional stages. In total, 18 and 12 unique families were, respectively, obtained for bacteria and fungi, as indicators of microbial community succession across the six stages. Bacterial alpha diversity was positively correlated with plant species alpha diversity, while fungal diversity was negatively correlated with plant species diversity. Certain fungal and bacterial taxa appeared to be associated with the occurrence of dominant plant species at different successional stages. Soil properties (pH, total N, total C, NH4-N, NO3-N, and PO4-P concentrations) and plant traits explained 63.80% and 56.68% of total variance in bacterial and fungal community compositions, respectively. These results indicate that soil microbial communities are coupled with plant communities via the mediation of microbial species diversity and community composition over a long-term secondary forest succession in the semi-arid ecosystem. The bacterial and fungal communities show distinct patterns in response to plant community succession, according to both soil abiotic properties and plant functional traits.

Highlights

  • Continued deforestation has resulted in the expansion of secondary forest areas in terrestrial ecosystems

  • Our results further showed that plant height, Seed mass (SM), LPC, specific leaf area (SLA), SNC, and root nitrogen concentration (RNC) were significantly related to the composition of soil bacterial and fungal communities during secondary forest succession on the Loess Plateau

  • We found substantial changes in soil bacterial and fungal community compositions during a long-term secondary forest succession on the Loess Plateau

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Summary

Introduction

Continued deforestation has resulted in the expansion of secondary forest areas in terrestrial ecosystems. It is becoming increasingly important to understand the successional processes of secondary forests (Bruelheide et al, 2011). Forest community succession is driven by aboveground–belowground interactions (Bardgett et al, 2005; Kardol et al, 2006). Since soil microbes play a key role in plant species coexistence and community structure, they are increasingly being recognized as belowground drivers of plant diversity in terrestrial ecosystems (van der Heijden et al, 2008; Klironomos et al, 2011; Delgado-Baquerizo et al, 2018). Soil microbes generally have rapid responses and high turnover rates in the face of alterations in the environment; soil microbes may provide additional information about the succession mechanism and an early indication of the restoration trajectory after ecosystem disturbances (Banning et al, 2011)

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