Ecotoxicology and Environmental Safety (Nov 2023)

Patterns of bacterial distance decay and community assembly in different land-use types as influenced by tillage management and soil layers

  • Hao Liu,
  • Heming Han,
  • Cunzhi Zhang,
  • Xiaowei Yu,
  • Wenfang Nie,
  • Qiuyun Shao,
  • Ping Yang,
  • Xiang Li,
  • Yang Yang,
  • Hui Cao

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 266
p. 115595

Abstract

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Land use and cover change are major factors driving global change and greatly impact terrestrial organisms, especially soil microbial diversity. Little is known, however, about bacterial diversity, distribution patterns and assembly processes across different land use types. In this study, therefore, we conducted a large-scale field survey of 48 sampling sites, encompassing different land use types in Xuancheng city, China, with different degrees of soil disturbance and different soil horizons. The distance-decay relationships (DDRs), assembly processes and the spatial patterns of soil bacterial communities were investigated based on high-throughput sequencing data. We found that the DDRs might be weakened by anthropogenic disturbances, which were not observed in tilled soils, while a decreasing trend was observed along the soil horizon in untilled soils. The relative importance of environmental factors and geographic distance varied with soil tillage. Specifically, bacterial communities in tilled soils were driven by non-spatially autocorrelated environmental factors, while untilled soils were more susceptible to geographic distance. In addition, the heterogeneity of soil properties, as well as the differences in soil bacterial niche width and niche overlap, determined the assembly processes of the bacterial community, resulting in opposite trends along the soil layers in tilled and untilled soils. These findings expand the current understanding of the biogeography of soil bacterial communities across different land use types.

Keywords