4.7 Article

Elevation rather than season determines the assembly and co-occurrence patterns of soil bacterial communities in forest ecosystems of Mount Gongga

Journal

APPLIED MICROBIOLOGY AND BIOTECHNOLOGY
Volume 104, Issue 17, Pages 7589-7602

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00253-020-10783-w

Keywords

Bacterial community; Seasonal change; Ecological processes; Co-occurrence patterns; Forest ecosystem; Mount Gongga

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [41630751, 31570496, 31870473]
  2. Open Fund of Key Laboratory of Environmental and Applied Microbiology CAS
  3. 13th Five-year Informatization Plan of CAS [XXH13503-03-106]
  4. China Biodiversity Observation Networks (Sino BON)

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Seasonal dynamics of soil microbial communities may influence ecosystem functions and services. However, few observations have been conducted on the dynamics of a bacterial community assembly across seasons in different elevations in mountain forest ecosystems. In this study, the diversity, compositions, community assembly processes, and co-occurrence interactions of soil bacterial communities were investigated using Illumina sequencing of 16S rRNA genes across different seasons during two consecutive years (2016 and 2017) at two elevational sites in Mount Gongga, China. These two sites included an evergreen broad-leaved forest (EBF, 2100 m a.s.l.) and a dark coniferous forest (DCF, 3000 m a.s.l.). The results showed that bacterial diversity and structure varied considerably between the two elevational sites with only limited seasonal variations. Interannuality had a significant effect on the diversity and structure of soil bacterial communities. The bacterial alpha diversity was significantly higher at site EBF(e.g., OTUs richness, 2207 +/- 276) than at site DCF(e.g., OTUs richness, 1826 +/- 315). Soil pH, temperature, elevation, and water content were identified as important factors shaping soil bacterial communities in the mountain forests. Bacterial community assembly was primarily governed by deterministic processes regardless of elevation and season. Deterministic processes were stronger at site DCF than at EBF. The soil bacterial community at site EBF harbored a more complex and connected network with less resistance to environmental changes. Overall, this study showed that seasonal dynamics of bacterial communities were much weaker than those along elevations, implying that a single-season survey on a bacterial community along an elevational gradient can represent overall changes in the bacterial community.

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