Abstract

Soil prokaryotes composition and diversity are the key to uncovering the mechanisms that drive variations in soil biogeochemical processes. Soil erosion is a primary factor that affects the spatial distribution of the soil prokaryotic community, but how soil prokaryotes in soil-eroding catena respond to environmental factors related to topography remains largely unclear. In this study, topsoils were sampled from three typical erosion geomorphic units (autonomous, transitional and depositional zones) in 2018 to identify the soil prokaryotic community and interactions among the species on the Chinese Loess Plateau. The alpha-diversity was greater but the beta-diversity was lower in the autonomous and transitional zones than in the depositional zone. Gammaproteobacteria and Bacteroidetes were 73% and 68% lower in the autonomous and transitional zones than in the depositional zone. In addition, Deltaproteobacteria, Acidobacteria, Firmicutes, Actinobacteria, Chloroflexi, Gemmatimonadetes and Nitrospirae were significantly higher in the autonomous and transitional zones. A less clustered network and fewer co-occurrences within the prokaryotic community and functional groups of processes were found in the depositional zone than in the autonomous and transitional zones. The alpha-diversity index was significantly negatively correlated with clay particles, soil water content, soil organic carbon (SOC), and ratio of SOC and nitrogen (C/N) but positively correlated with total nitrogen (TN). The higher relative abundances of copiotrophic groups (including Gammaproteobacteria, Bacteroidetes, etc.) in the depositional zone was mainly due to the increased SOC caused by the deposition of SOC-rich clay. Reassembly of the soil physico-chemistry characteristics among the topographic units significantly altered the soil prokaryotic community along the soil-eroding catena.

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