Difference in soil bacterial community composition depends on forest type rather than nitrogen and phosphorus additions in tropical montane rainforests

被引:0
|
作者
Pin Li
Congcong Shen
Lai Jiang
Zhaozhong Feng
Jingyun Fang
机构
[1] Chinese Academy of Sciences,State Key Laboratory of Urban and Regional Ecology, Research Center for Eco
[2] University of Chinese Academy of Sciences,Environmental Sciences
[3] Peking University,College of Resources and Environment
[4] Nanjing University of Information Science & Technology,Department of Ecology, College of Urban and Environmental Sciences, and Key Laboratory for Earth Surface Processes of the Ministry of Education
来源
关键词
Nitrogen and phosphorus addition; Soil bacterial community; Tropic; Primary and secondary forest; Pyrosequencing;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Rapid increase of nitrogen (N) deposition could alter nutrient availability, leading to changes in soil microbial processes and ecosystem carbon and nutrient cycling. However, the effects of N deposition on soil microbes remain elusive in the tropical rainforests in Asia. Here, we conducted a 3-year N addition experiment with four treatments (0, 20, 50, and 100 kg N ha−1 year−1) in a primary and secondary tropical montane forest in Hainan Island, China, to explore the effects of elevated N availability on soil microbial community composition. We also conducted a phosphorus (P) treatment (50 kg P ha−1 year−1) and a N + P treatment (50 kg N ha−1 year−1 + 50 kg P ha−1 year−1) to examine potential P limitation driven by N deposition in highly weathered tropical soils, using a bar-coded pyrosequencing technique. The composition of soil bacterial communities differed dramatically between the primary and secondary forests, but not significant dissimilarity among the fertilization treatments. The community composition, phylogenetic diversity and phylotype richness were significantly correlated with soil pH, total organic C (TOC), and total N (TN), respectively. There were significant differences between the primary and secondary forest in pH, TOC, and TN, but not among the fertilization treatments. These results suggest that differences in soil nutrient status between the primary and secondary forests due to different successional stages rather than chronic N fertilization may be the major factor affecting soil bacterial composition in the tropical montane rainforests.
引用
收藏
页码:313 / 323
页数:10
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [41] Changes in soil bacterial community diversity following the removal of invasive feral pigs from a Hawaiian tropical montane wet forest
    Wehr, Nathaniel H.
    Kinney, Kealohanuiopuna M.
    Nguyen, Nhu H.
    Giardina, Christian P.
    Litton, Creighton M.
    SCIENTIFIC REPORTS, 2019, 9 (1)
  • [42] Changes in soil bacterial community diversity following the removal of invasive feral pigs from a Hawaiian tropical montane wet forest
    Nathaniel H. Wehr
    Kealohanuiopuna M. Kinney
    Nhu H. Nguyen
    Christian P. Giardina
    Creighton M. Litton
    Scientific Reports, 9
  • [43] The Spatial Factor, Rather than Elevated CO2, Controls the Soil Bacterial Community in a Temperate Forest Ecosystem
    Ge, Yuan
    Chen, Chengrong
    Xu, Zhihong
    Oren, Ram
    He, Ji-Zheng
    APPLIED AND ENVIRONMENTAL MICROBIOLOGY, 2010, 76 (22) : 7429 - 7436
  • [44] Linking microbial nutrient limitation and community composition to nitrogen mineralization in bamboo forest soil with phosphorus addition
    Hu, Tong-Tao
    Bu, Dong
    Zhang, Yang
    Wang, Fang-Chao
    Li, Jian-Jun
    Zu, Kui-Ling
    Meng, Ming-Hui
    Liang, Chao
    Fang, Xiang-Min
    SOIL ECOLOGY LETTERS, 2025, 7 (01)
  • [45] Phosphorus rather than nitrogen enhances CO2 emissions in tropical forest soils: Evidence from a laboratory incubation study
    Hui, Dafeng
    Porter, Wesley
    Phillips, Jana R.
    Aidar, Marcos P. M.
    Lebreux, Steven J.
    Schadt, Christopher W.
    Mayes, Melanie A.
    EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF SOIL SCIENCE, 2020, 71 (03) : 495 - 510
  • [46] Effects of Nitrogen and Phosphorus Inputs on Soil Bacterial Abundance, Diversity, and Community Composition in Chinese Fir Plantations
    Wang, Qing
    Wang, Cong
    Yu, WeiWei
    Turak, Ali
    Chen, Diwen
    Huang, Ying
    Ao, Junhua
    Jiang, Yong
    Huang, Zhengrui
    FRONTIERS IN MICROBIOLOGY, 2018, 9
  • [47] Soil available nitrogen and phosphorus affected by functional bacterial community composition and diversity as ecological restoration progressed
    Wang, Honglei
    Bu, Lianyan
    Song, Fangqin
    Tian, Jing
    Wei, Gehong
    LAND DEGRADATION & DEVELOPMENT, 2021, 32 (01) : 183 - 198
  • [48] Late Quaternary climate change explains soil fungal community composition rather than fungal richness in forest ecosystems
    Ji, Niu-Niu
    Gao, Cheng
    Sandel, Brody
    Zheng, Yong
    Chen, Liang
    Wu, Bin-Wei
    Li, Xing-Chun
    Wang, Yong-Long
    Lue, Peng-Peng
    Sun, Xiang
    Guo, Liang-Dong
    ECOLOGY AND EVOLUTION, 2019, 9 (11): : 6678 - 6692
  • [49] Responses of bacterial and fungal communities to short-term nitrogen and phosphorus additions in temperate forest soil aggregates in northeastern China
    Yu, Ying
    Chen, Lixin
    Duan, Wenbiao
    APPLIED SOIL ECOLOGY, 2024, 197
  • [50] The carbon and nitrogen stoichiometry in litter-soil-microbe continuum rather than plant diversity primarily shapes the changes in bacterial communities along a tropical forest restoration chronosequence
    Wang, Shaojun
    Zhao, Shuang
    Yang, Bo
    Zhang, Kunfeng
    Fan, Yuxiang
    Zhang, Lulu
    Yang, Xiaodong
    CATENA, 2022, 213