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Dynamics of soil biota and nutrients at varied depths in a Tamarix ramosissima-dominated natural desert ecosystem: Implications for nutrient cycling and desertification management.

Authors :
Islam, Waqar
Zeng, Fanjiang
Ahmed Dar, Afzal
Sohail Yousaf, Muhammad
Source :
Journal of Environmental Management. Mar2024, Vol. 354, pN.PAG-N.PAG. 1p.
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

The underground community of soil organisms, known as soil biota, plays a critical role in terrestrial ecosystems. Different ecosystems exhibit varied responses of soil organisms to soil physical and chemical properties (SPCPs). However, our understanding of how soil biota react to different soil depths in naturally established population of salinity tolerant Tamarix ramosissima in desert ecosystems, remains limited. To address this, we employed High-Throughput Illumina HiSeq Sequencing to examine the population dynamics of soil bacteria, fungi, archaea, protists, and metazoa at six different soil depths (0–100 cm) in the naturally occurring T. ramosissima dominant zone within the Taklimakan desert of China. Our observations reveal that the alpha diversity of bacteria, fungi, metazoa, and protists displayed a linear decrease with the increase of soil depth, whereas archaea exhibited an inverse pattern. The beta diversity of soil biota, particularly metazoa, bacteria, and protists, demonstrated noteworthy associations with soil depths through Non-Metric Dimensional Scaling analysis. Among the most abundant classes of soil organisms, we observed Actinobacteria, Sordariomycetes, Halobacteria, Spirotrichea, and Nematoda for bacteria, fungi, archaea, protists, and metazoa, respectively. Additionally, we identified associations between the vertical distribution of dominant biotic communities and SPCPs. Bacterial changes were mainly influenced by total potassium, available phosphorus (AP), and soil water content (SWC), while fungi were impacted by nitrate (NO 3 -) and available potassium (AK). Archaea showed correlations with total carbon (TC) and AK thus suggesting their role in methanogenesis and methane oxidation, protists with AP and SWC, and metazoa with AP and pH. These correlations underscore potential connections to nutrient cycling and the production and consumption of greenhouse gases (GhGs). This insight establishes a solid foundation for devising strategies to mitigate nutrient cycling and GHG emissions in desert soils, thereby playing a pivotal role in the advancement of comprehensive approaches to sustainable desert ecosystem management. • Soil nutrients and diversity of soil biota across different soil depths in Tamarix ramosissima was investigated. • Declining pattern in the alpha diversity of soil biota was recorded with an increase in soil depth except archaea. • The most prevalent classes were Actinobacteria, Sordariomycetes, Halobacteria, Spirotrichea, and Nematoda. • AP and SWC influenced bacteria and protists, while AK affected fungi and archaea and metazoa by AP and pH. • Our findings provide a new perspective on the vertical distribution of soil biota in T. ramosissima in desert ecosystem. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
03014797
Volume :
354
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Journal of Environmental Management
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
175834345
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jenvman.2024.120217