4.7 Article

Changes in Soil Microbial Community Structure Following Different Tree Species Functional Traits Afforestation

Journal

FORESTS
Volume 12, Issue 8, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/f12081018

Keywords

functional traits; monoculture plantation; mixed-species plantation; microbial community structure

Categories

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [31670476]
  2. National Key R&D Program of China [2018YFC0507003]
  3. Applied technology research and Development Program of Heilongjiang Province [GA20B401]
  4. Fundamental Research Funds for the Central Universities [2572019BA15, 2572019CP09]
  5. Heilongjiang Touyan Innovation Team Program Technology Development Team for High-efficient Silviculture of Forest Resources

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The study investigated the soil microbial community structure using fungi ITS and bacteria 16S rDNA, finding a close relationship between fungal communities and tree species, and between bacterial communities and soil nitrogen. Co-occurrence networks were stronger in mixed plantations, with microbial structures related to soil carbon and nitrogen significantly increased.
The soil microbial community structure is critical to the cycling of carbon and nitrogen in forest soils. As afforestation practices increasingly promote different functional traits of tree species, it has become critical to understand how they influence soil microbial community structures, which directly influence soil biogeochemical processes. We used fungi ITS and bacteria 16S rDNA to investigate soil microbial community structures in three monoculture plantations consisting of a non-native evergreen conifer (Pinus sibirica), a native deciduous conifer (Larix gmelinii), and a native deciduous angiosperm (Betula platyphylla) and compared them with two 1:1 mixed-species plantations (P. sibirica and L. gmelinii, P. sibirica and B. platyphylla). The fungal community structure of the conifer-angiosperm mixed plantation was similar to that of the non-native evergreen conifer, and the bacterial community structure was similar to that of the angiosperm monoculture plantation. Fungal communities were strongly related to tree species, but bacterial communities were strongly related to soil nitrogen. The co-occurrence networks were more robust in the mixed plantations, and the microbial structures associated with soil carbon and nitrogen were significantly increased. Our results provide a comparative study of the soil microbial ecology in response to afforestation of species with different functional traits and enhance the understanding of factors controlling the soil microbial community structure.

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