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Reclamation of tidal flats to paddy soils reshuffles the soil microbiomes along a 53-year reclamation chronosequence: Evidence from assembly processes, co-occurrence patterns and multifunctionality

Authors :
Cheng Chen
Guoyu Yin
Lijun Hou
Yinghui Jiang
Dongyao Sun
Xia Liang
Ping Han
Yanling Zheng
Min Liu
Source :
Environment International, Vol 179, Iss , Pp 108151- (2023)
Publication Year :
2023
Publisher :
Elsevier, 2023.

Abstract

Coastal soil microbiomes play a key role in coastal ecosystem functioning and are intensely threatened by land reclamation. However, the impacts of coastal reclamation on soil microbial communities, particularly on their assembly processes, co-occurrence patterns, and the multiple soil functions they support, remain poorly understood. This impedes our capability to comprehensively evaluate the impacts of coastal reclamation on soil microbiomes and to restore coastal ecosystem functions degraded by reclamation. Here, we investigated the temporal dynamics of bacterial and fungal communities, community assembly processes, co-occurrence patterns, and ecosystem multifunctionality along a 53-year chronosequence of paddy soil following reclamation from tidal flats. Reclamation of tidal flats to paddy soils resulted in decreased β-diversity, increased homogeneous selection, and decreased network complexity and robustness of both bacterial and fungal communities, but caused contrasting α-diversity response patterns of them. Reclamation of tidal flats to paddy soils also decreased the multifunctionality of coastal ecosystems, which was largely associated with the fungal network complexity and α-diversity. Collectively, this work demonstrates that coastal reclamation strongly reshaped the soil microbiomes at the level of assembly mechanisms, interaction patterns, and functionality level, and highlights that soil fungal community complexity should be considered as a key factor in restoring coastal ecosystem functions deteriorated by land reclamation.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
01604120
Volume :
179
Issue :
108151-
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
Environment International
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.0296a231029f477381939d3e671fbda8
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.envint.2023.108151