Abstract
Uncovering the linkages between community assembly and species diversity is a fundamental issue in microbial ecology. In this study, a large-scale (transect intervals of 1257.6km) cross-biome soil survey was conducted, which ranged over agricultural fields, forests, wetlands, grasslands and desert, in the arid regions of northwest China. The aim was to investigate the biogeographic distribution, community assembly and species co-occurrence of soil fungi. The fungal communities in agricultural soils exhibited a steeper distance-decay slope and wider niche breadths, and were more strongly affected by stochastic assembly processes, than fungi in other natural habitats. A strong relationship was revealed between soil fungal richness and community assembly in arid ecosystems, with the influence of stochastic assembly processes decreasing with increasing fungal richness. Moreover, aridity was the most important environmental factor influencing fungal richness, β-diversity and species co-occurrence patterns. Specifically, the predicted increase in arid conditions will probably reduce fungal richness and network complexity. These findings represent a considerable advance in linking fungal richness to mechanisms underlying the biogeographic patterns and assembly processes of fungal communities in arid ecosystems. These results can thus be used to forecast species co-occurrence and diversities pattern of soil fungi under climate aridity and land-use change scenarios.
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