Abstract

Spatial heterogeneity of soil bacterial community depends on scales. The fine-scale spatial heterogeneity of bacterial community composition and functions remains unknown. We analyzed the main driving factors of fine-scale spatial patterns of soil bacterial community composition and carbon metabolic functions across a 30 m × 40 m plot within a Korean pine forest by combining Illumina 16S rRNA sequencing with Biolog Ecoplates based on 53 soil samples. Clear spatial patterns in bacterial community composition and metabolic functions were observed in the forest soil. The bacterial community composition and metabolic functions both showed distance-decay of similarity within a distance of meters. Structural equation model analysis revealed that environmental variables and geographic distance together explained 37.9% and 63.1% of community and metabolic functions, respectively. Among all environmental factors, soil organic carbon (SOC) and root biomass emerged as the most important drivers of the bacterial community structure. In contrast, soil pH explained the largest variance in metabolic functions. Root biomass explained the second-largest variance in soil bacterial community composition, but root traits made no difference in metabolic functions variance. These results allow us to better understand the mechanisms controlling belowground diversity and plant-microbe interactions in forest ecosystems.

Highlights

  • Soil bacteria drive important biogeochemical processes and play critical roles in regulating the functions and stability of ecosystems (Fuhrman, 2009; Lladó, López-Mondéjar & Baldrian, 2017; Sugden, 2018)

  • We investigated the significance of geographic distance, soil properties, and root traits in shaping the bacterial community composition and functions within a broad-leaved Korean pine forest

  • We identified a total of 1,233,787 high-quality bacterial sequences grouped into 10,739 Operational taxonomic units (OTUs)

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Soil bacteria drive important biogeochemical processes and play critical roles in regulating the functions and stability of ecosystems (Fuhrman, 2009; Lladó, López-Mondéjar & Baldrian, 2017; Sugden, 2018). The geographic distribution of soil bacteria has been recently examined across a broad range of spatial scales (Griffiths et al, 2011; Martiny et al, 2011; Ranjard et al, 2013; Sugden, 2018). Most of these studies compared samples collected more than 1 km apart, and studies on fine-scale (

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