DOI: 10.1002/ldr.4892 ISSN:

Soil bacterial community and ecosystem multifunctionality regulated by keystone plant species during secondary succession

Ruiguang Shang, Shuaifeng Li, Xiaobo Huang, Wande Liu, Xuedong Lang, Chonghua Xu, Jianrong Su
  • Soil Science
  • General Environmental Science
  • Development
  • Environmental Chemistry

Abstract

Plants and soil bacteria exert a vital function in mediating soil ecosystem multifunctionality (EMF). Nevertheless, plant and soil bacteria interaction during forest secondary succession is poorly understood, and their roles in soil EMF remain largely unexplored. The dynamics of soil physicochemical properties and bacterial diversity was studied in southwest China during forest succession from coniferous to monsoon broadleaf evergreen. Interdomain ecological networks (IDEN) were adopted for investigating plant–bacteria associations. With the purpose of assessing how soil factors, bacterial community and plant diversity influenced soil EMF, the structural equation model (SEM) was used. It was discovered that both soil bacterial diversity and soil EMF gradually increased with the succession. IDEN analysis revealed that plant–bacteria ecological networks differed significantly across successional stages. Keystone plant species richness (KSR) increased with succession, which benefited soil bacteria diversity (path coefficient = 0.802, p < 0.001) while having a direct negative impact on pH (path coefficient = −0.602, p < 0.05) and C:N (path coefficient = −0.759, p < 0.001). Soil pH and C:N ratio declines were observed during forest secondary succession and were found to be inversely related to soil EMF. Furthermore, soil pH was found to be inversely related to bacterial diversity. The SEM analysis explained 88.2% of the variation in soil multifunctionality. The findings suggested that keystone plant species played a key function in regulating the variations of soil bacterial community and EMF (total effect = 0.813). Our study clarified the critical functions of keystone species in driving soil bacterial diversity and multifunctionality during forest succession and provided a new perspective on the relationship between above‐ and below‐ground.

More from our Archive