Microorganisms (Jan 2021)

Higher Sensitivity of Soil Microbial Network Than Community Structure under Acid Rain

  • Ziqiang Liu,
  • Hui Wei,
  • Jiaen Zhang,
  • Muhammad Saleem,
  • Yanan He,
  • Jiawen Zhong,
  • Rui Ma

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/microorganisms9010118
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9, no. 1
p. 118

Abstract

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Acid rain (AR), as a global environmental threat, has profoundly adverse effects on natural soil ecosystems. Microorganisms involved in the nitrogen (N) cycle regulate the global N balance and climate stabilization, but little is known whether and how AR influences the structure and complexity of these microbial communities. Herein, we conducted an intact soil core experiment by manipulating the acidity of simulated rain (pH 7.5 (control, CK) vs. pH 4.0 (AR)) in subtropical agricultural soil, to reveal the differences in the structure and complexity of soil nitrifying and denitrifying microbiota using Illumina amplicon sequencing of functional genes (amoA, nirS, and nosZ). Networks of ammonia-oxidizing archaea (AOA) and nirS-carrying denitrifiers in AR treatment were less complex with fewer nodes and lower connectivity, while network of nosZ-carrying denitrifiers in AR treatment had higher complexity and connectivity relative to CK. Supporting this, AR reduced the abundance of keystone taxa in networks of AOA and nirS-carrying denitrifiers, but increased the abundance of keystone taxa in nosZ-carrying denitrifiers network. However, AR did not alter the community structure of AOA, ammonia-oxidizing bacteria (AOB), nirS-, and nosZ-carrying denitrifiers. Moreover, AR did not change soil N2O emissions during the experimental period. AOB community structure significantly correlated with content of soil available phosphorus (P), while the community structures of nirS- and nosZ-carrying denitrifiers both correlated with soil pH and available P content. Soil N2O emission was mainly driven by the nirS-carrying denitrifiers. Our results present new perspective on the impacts of AR on soil N-cycle microbial network complexity and keystone taxa in the context of global changes.

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