1. Variations of soil metal content, soil enzyme activity and soil bacterial community in Rhododendron delavayi natural shrub forest at different elevations.
- Author
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Wang L, Tang M, Gong J, Malik K, Liu J, Kong X, Chen X, Chen L, Tang R, Zheng R, Wang J, and Yi Y
- Subjects
- China, Metals analysis, Actinobacteria genetics, Actinobacteria enzymology, Actinobacteria isolation & purification, Actinobacteria classification, Microbiota, Urease metabolism, Acidobacteria genetics, Acidobacteria isolation & purification, Acidobacteria enzymology, Acidobacteria classification, RNA, Ribosomal, 16S genetics, Phylogeny, High-Throughput Nucleotide Sequencing, Soil Microbiology, Soil chemistry, Rhododendron microbiology, Bacteria classification, Bacteria genetics, Bacteria enzymology, Bacteria isolation & purification, Forests
- Abstract
Background: Rhododendron delavayi is a natural shrub that is distributed at different elevations in the karst region of Bijie, China, and that has an important role in preventing land degradation in this region. In this study, we determined the soil mineral element contents and soil enzyme activities. The composition of the soil bacterial community of R. delavayi at three elevations (1448 m, 1643 m, and 1821 m) was analyzed by high-throughput sequencing, and the interrelationships among the soil bacterial communities, mineral elements, and enzyme activities were determined., Results: The Shannon index of the soil bacterial community increased and then decreased with increasing elevation and was highest at 1643 m. Elevations increased the number of total nodes and edges of the soil bacterial community network, and more positive correlations at 1821 m suggested stronger intraspecific cooperation. Acidobacteria, Actinobacteria and Proteobacteria were the dominant phyla at all three elevations. The Mantel test and correlation analysis showed that Fe and soil urease significantly affected bacterial communities at 1448 m; interestingly, Chloroflexi was positively related to soil urease at 1448 m, and Actinobacteria was positively correlated with Ni and Zn at 1821 m. Fe and soil urease significantly influenced the bacterial communities at lower elevations, and high elevation (1821 m) enhanced the positive interactions of the soil bacteria, which might be a strategy for R. delavayi to adapt to high elevation environments., Conclusion: Elevation significantly influenced the composition of soil bacterial communities by affecting the content of soil mineral elements and soil enzyme activity., (© 2024. The Author(s).)
- Published
- 2024
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