Responses of soil bacterial communities to nitrogen deposition and precipitation increment are closely linked with aboveground community variation

H Li, Z Xu, S Yang, X Li, EM Top, R Wang, Y Zhang… - Microbial ecology, 2016 - Springer
H Li, Z Xu, S Yang, X Li, EM Top, R Wang, Y Zhang, J Cai, F Yao, X Han, Y Jiang
Microbial ecology, 2016Springer
It has been predicted that precipitation and atmospheric nitrogen (N) deposition will increase
in northern China; yet, ecosystem responses to the interactive effects of water and N remain
largely unknown. In particular, responses of belowground microbial community to projected
global change and their potential linkages to aboveground macro-organisms are rarely
studied. In this study, we examined the responses of soil bacterial diversity and community
composition to increased precipitation and multi-level N deposition in a temperate steppe in …
Abstract
It has been predicted that precipitation and atmospheric nitrogen (N) deposition will increase in northern China; yet, ecosystem responses to the interactive effects of water and N remain largely unknown. In particular, responses of belowground microbial community to projected global change and their potential linkages to aboveground macro-organisms are rarely studied. In this study, we examined the responses of soil bacterial diversity and community composition to increased precipitation and multi-level N deposition in a temperate steppe in Inner Mongolia, China, and explored the diversity linkages between aboveground and belowground communities. It was observed that N addition caused the significant decrease in bacterial alpha-diversity and dramatic changes in community composition. In addition, we documented strong correlations of alpha- and beta-diversity between plant and bacterial communities in response to N addition. It was found that N enriched the so-called copiotrophic bacteria, but reduced the oligotrophic groups, primarily by increasing the soil inorganic N content and carbon availability and decreasing soil pH. We still highlighted that increased precipitation tended to alleviate the effects of N on bacterial diversity and dampen the plant-microbe connections induced by N. The counteractive effects of N addition and increased precipitation imply that even though the ecosystem diversity and function are predicted to be negatively affected by N deposition in the coming decades; the combination with increased precipitation may partially offset this detrimental effect.
Springer
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