4.6 Article

Soil Acidobacterial community composition changes sensitively with wetland degradation in northeastern of China

Journal

FRONTIERS IN MICROBIOLOGY
Volume 13, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/fmicb.2022.1052161

Keywords

Sanjiang plain; soil bacterial diversity; beta diversity; high-throughput sequencing; forest; community structure

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Acidobacteria are an important component of soil bacteria, and their structure and diversity are influenced by climate changes and human activities. This study investigated the Acidobacterial community and diversity in a typical wetland degradation series in northeastern China. The results showed that the soil physicochemical properties changed significantly along the degradation stages and the composition of Acidobacteria was influenced by different soil environmental factors in wetland and forest stages. These findings highlight the importance of understanding the role of Acidobacteria in wetland ecosystems.
Acidobacteria are a major component of the soil bacteria and are conducted for many soil functions, and the soil Acidobacterial structure and diversity are affected by climate changes and human activities. However, soil Acidobacterial structure and diversity in wetland ecosystems are still limited recognized. The current study aimed to study the Acidobacterial community and diversity in relation to soil environmental factors along a typical degradation series from primitive wetland to forest in a representative fresh wetland in northeastern China. In this research, we assessed the soil Acidobacterial community composition, using Illumina MiSeq sequencing along a typical degradation series from primitive wetland to forest in a representative fresh wetland in northeastern China. The soil physico chemical properties changed significantly among the eight degrade stages (p < 0.05). The alpha diversity index (Shannon and Chao1 index) of soil Acidobacteria changed significantly between different degradation stages (p < 0.05). Principal Coordinates Analysis (PCoA) revealed that the soil acidobacteiral communities obviously separated into wetland group and forest group. The most abundant subgroups of Acidobacteria accounted for 31% (Gp1), 5% (Gp2), 12% (Gp3), 2% (Gp4), 5% (Gp6), and 2% (Gp7) in soils within eight successional series. The compositions of soil Acidobacteria in wetland stages were significantly affected by soil moisture content, soil total nitrogen and available nitrogen contents, while those in forest stages were significantly driven by soil pH, soil organic carbon, total nitrogen, available phosphorus and soil moisture content. Our results indicated that the soil Acidobacterial community was mainly structured by soil physico chemical parameters, and wetland degradation towards forests will greatly influence the soil Acidobacterial structure and thus the wetland functions.

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