Changes in microbial community structure and functioning with elevation are linked to local soil characteristics as well as climatic variables

2022-12-28 | journal article. A publication with affiliation to the University of Göttingen.

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​Changes in microbial community structure and functioning with elevation are linked to local soil characteristics as well as climatic variables​
Lux, J.; Xie, Z.; Sun, X.; Wu, D. & Scheu, S.​ (2022) 
Ecology and Evolution12(12).​ DOI: https://doi.org/10.1002/ece3.9632 

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Authors
Lux, Johannes; Xie, Zhijing; Sun, Xin; Wu, Donghui; Scheu, Stefan
Abstract
Abstract Mountain forests are important carbon stocks and biodiversity hotspots but are threatened by increased insect outbreaks and climate‐driven forest conversion. Soil microorganisms play an eminent role in nutrient cycling in forest habitats and form the basis of soil food webs. Uncovering the driving factors shaping microbial communities and functioning at mountainsides across the world is of eminent importance to better understand their dynamics at local and global scales. We investigated microbial communities and their climatic and local soil‐related drivers along an elevational gradient (800–1700 m asl) of primary forests at Changbai Mountain, China. We analyzed substrate‐induced respiration and phospholipid fatty acids (PLFA) in litter and two soil layers at seven sites. Microbial biomass (Cmic) peaked in the litter layer and increased towards higher elevations. In the litter layer, the increase in Cmic and in stress indicator ratios was negatively correlated with Ca concentrations indicating increased nutritional stress in high microbial biomass communities at sites with lower Ca availability. PLFA profiles in the litter layer separated low and high elevations, but this was less pronounced in soil, suggesting that the litter layer functions as a buffer for soil microbial communities. Annual variations in temperature correlated with PLFA profiles in all three layers, while annual variations in precipitation correlated with PLFA profiles in upper soil only. Furthermore, the availability of resources, soil moisture, Ca concentrations, and pH structured the microbial communities. Pronounced changes in Cmic and stress indicator ratios in the litter layer between pine‐dominated (800–1100 m) and spruce‐dominated (1250–1700 m) forests indicated a shift in the structure and functioning of microbial communities between forest types along the elevational gradient. The study highlights strong changes in microbial community structure and functioning along elevational gradients, but also shows that these changes and their driving factors vary between soil layers. Besides annual variations in temperature and precipitation, carbon accumulation and nitrogen acquisition shape changes in microbial communities with elevation at Changbai Mountain.
This paper investigated the microbial community in litter and two soil layers along an elevational gradient of primary forest at Changbai Mountain, China. We identified local soil characteristics, especially pH and calcium concentrations, as well as climatic variables as most important drivers for microbial community compositon. The influence of the elevational gradient and the relevant drivers varied between litter and soil layers. image
Issue Date
28-December-2022
Journal
Ecology and Evolution 
ISSN
2045-7758
eISSN
2045-7758
Language
English
Sponsor
Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft http://dx.doi.org/10.13039/501100001659
National Natural Science Foundation of China http://dx.doi.org/10.13039/501100001809

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