Journal of Integrative Agriculture (Aug 2024)

Effect of land use on soil nematode community composition and co-occurrence network relationship

  • Xiaotong Liu,
  • Siwei Liang,
  • Yijia Tian,
  • Xiao Wang,
  • Wenju Liang,
  • Xiaoke Zhang

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 23, no. 8
pp. 2807 – 2819

Abstract

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Land use influences soil biota community composition and diversity, and then belowground ecosystem processes and functions. To characterize the effect of land use on soil biota, soil nematode communities in crop land, forest land and fallow land were investigated in six regions of northern China. Generic richness, diversity, abundance and biomass of soil nematodes was the lowest in crop land. The richness and diversity of soil nematodes were 28.8 and 15.1% higher in fallow land than in crop land, respectively. No significant differences in soil nematode indices were found between forest land and fallow land, but their network keystone genera composition was different. Among the keystone genera, 50% of forest land genera were omnivores-predators and 36% of fallow land genera were bacterivores. The proportion of fungivores in forest land was 20.8% lower than in fallow land. The network complexity and the stability were lower in crop land than forest land and fallow land. Soil pH, NH4+-N and NO3−-N were the major factors influencing the soil nematode community in crop land while soil organic carbon and moisture were the major factors in forest land. Soil nematode communities in crop land influenced by artificial management practices were more dependent on the soil environment than communities in forest land and fallow land. Land use induced soil environment variation and altered network relationships by influencing trophic group proportions among keystone nematode genera.

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