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Unraveling Key Functional Bacteria across Land-Use Types on the Tibetan Plateau

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AMER ASSOC ADVANCEMENT SCIENCE
DOI: 10.34133/ehs.0071

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Soil bacteria play a crucial role in regulating soil carbon and nutrient cycling. However, their response to disturbance in different land-use types, particularly in alpine ecosystems, remains largely unknown. In this study, the potential of soil bacteria to influence biogeochemical processes was assessed across different land-use types on the Tibetan Plateau. The results showed that disturbance had diverse effects on soil bacterial community composition and metabolic potential. Certain bacterial taxa were found to be sensitive to disturbance, while others remained relatively stable. These findings highlight the importance of considering the effects of disturbance on soil bacteria in ecosystem management and policy decisions.
Soil bacteria are vital to the modulation of soil carbon and nutrient cycling. However, the response of key microbiota and the metabolic potential of soil bacteria to tolerate disturbance have yet to be fully investigated across land-use types, especially in alpine ecosystems. Here, the potential of soil bacteria to conduct change to affect biogeochemical processes was evaluated across 4 paired natural land-use types (i.e., forest converted to shrubland or grassland, shrubland to grassland, and grassland degradation) on the Tibetan Plateau. Based on the FAPROTAX database, we found 574, 106, and 22 bacterial genera that were possibly related to the carbon, nitrogen, and sulfur cycles, respectively. Among the core and/or key genera involved in carbon and/or nitrogen cycles, Bradyrhizobium and Solirubrobacter were common before and after disturbance, whereas Bryobacter, Mycobacterium, and Arthrobacter were sensitive to disturbance. Disturbance had diverse effects on soil bacterial percentages in specific metabolic pathways. In particular, soil bacteria may lead to the decreases in carbon and nitrogen fixation, nitrite oxidation, and sulfate reduction under grassland degradation. Annual precipitation and plant Shannon index were important factors driving bacterial functional groups. These findings shed light on the substantial impacts of disturbance on bacterial metabolism, and suggest that some important bacterial taxa must be taken into consideration in policymaking and management strategies for the enhancement and maintenance of ecosystem functions.

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