Long‐term nitrogen input alters plant and soil bacterial, but not fungal beta diversity in a semiarid grassland

Weixing Liu(Georgia Institute of Technology), Lingli Liu(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Xian Yang(Georgia Institute of Technology), Meifeng Deng(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Zhou Wang(South China Botanical Garden), Pandeng Wang(Sun Yat-sen University), Sen Yang(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Ping Li(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Ziyang Peng(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Lu Yang(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Lin Jiang(Georgia Institute of Technology)
Global Change Biology
May 16, 2021
Cited by 173

Abstract

Anthropogenic nitrogen (N) input is known to alter plant and microbial α-diversity, but how N enrichment influences β-diversity of plant and microbial communities remains poorly understood. Using a long-term multilevel N addition experiment in a temperate steppe, we show that plant, soil bacterial and fungal communities exhibited different responses in their β-diversity to N input. Plant β-diversity decreased linearly as N addition increased, as a result of increased directional environmental filtering, where soil environmental properties largely explained variation in plant β-diversity. Soil bacterial β-diversity first increased then decreased with increasing N input, which was best explained by corresponding changes in soil environmental heterogeneity. Soil fungal β-diversity, however, remained largely unchanged across the N gradient, with plant β-diversity, soil environmental properties, and heterogeneity together explaining an insignificant fraction of variation in fungal β-diversity, reflecting the importance of stochastic community assembly. Our study demonstrates the divergent effect of N enrichment on the assembly of plant, soil bacterial and fungal communities, emphasizing the need to examine closely associated fundamental components (i.e., plants and microorganisms) of ecosystems to gain a more complete understanding of ecological consequences of anthropogenic N enrichment.


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