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Climate warming leads to divergent succession of grassland microbial communities

Authors :
Guo, Xue
Feng, Jiajie
Shi, Zhou
Zhou, Xishu
Yuan, Mengting
Tao, Xuanyu
Hale, Lauren
Yuan, Tong
Wang, Jianjun
Qin, Yujia
Zhou, Aifen
Fu, Ying
Wu, Liyou
He, Zhili
Van Nostrand, Joy D
Ning, Daliang
Liu, Xueduan
Luo, Yiqi
Tiedje, James M
Yang, Yunfeng
Zhou, Jizhong
Source :
Nature Climate Change, vol 8, iss 9
Publication Year :
2018
Publisher :
eScholarship, University of California, 2018.

Abstract

Accurate climate projections require an understanding of the effects of warming on ecological communities and the underlying mechanisms that drive them1–3. However, little is known about the effects of climate warming on the succession of microbial communities4,5. Here we examined the temporal succession of soil microbes in a long-term climate change experiment at a tall-grass prairie ecosystem. Experimental warming was found to significantly alter the community structure of bacteria and fungi. By determining the time-decay relationships and the paired differences of microbial communities under warming and ambient conditions, experimental warming was shown to lead to increasingly divergent succession of the soil microbial communities, with possibly higher impacts on fungi than bacteria. Variation partition- and null model-based analyses indicate that stochastic processes played larger roles than deterministic ones in explaining microbial community taxonomic and phylogenetic compositions. However, in warmed soils, the relative importance of stochastic processes decreased over time, indicating a potential deterministic environmental filtering elicited by warming. Although successional trajectories of microbial communities are difficult to predict under future climate change scenarios, their composition and structure are projected to be less variable due to warming-driven selection.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Nature Climate Change, vol 8, iss 9
Accession number :
edsair.dedup.wf.001..036ca96b1fe5e5c52604256d7e5b8356