Department of Biological Sciences, University of Cape Town, Private Bag X3, Rondebosch 7701, South Africa; IRD, CIRAD, University of Montpellier, PHIM, Montpellier, France.
Department of Biological Sciences, University of Cape Town, Private Bag X3, Rondebosch 7701, South Africa.
Sci Total Environ. 2021 Sep 1;785:147189. doi: 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2021.147189. Epub 2021 Apr 19.
Fire and herbivory are important natural disturbances in grassy biomes. Both drivers are likely to influence belowground microbial communities but no studies have unravelled the long-term impact of both fire and herbivory on bacterial and fungal communities. We hypothesized that soil bacterial communities change through disturbance-induced shifts in soil properties (e.g. pH, nutrients) while soil fungal communities change through vegetation modification (biomass and species composition). To test these ideas, we characterised soil physico-chemical properties (pH, acidity, C, N, P and exchangeable cations content, texture, bulk density, moisture), plant species richness and biomass, microbial biomass and bacterial and fungal community composition and diversity (using 16S and ITS rRNA amplicon sequencing, respectively) in six long-term (18 to 70 years) ecological research sites in South African savanna and grassland ecosystems. We found that fire and herbivory regimes profoundly modified soil physico-chemical properties, plant species richness and standing biomass. In all sites, an increase in woody biomass (ranging from 12 to 50%) was observed when natural disturbances were excluded. The intensity and direction of changes in soil properties were highly dependent on the topo-pedo-climatic context. Overall, fire and herbivory shaped bacterial and fungal communities through distinct driving forces: edaphic properties (including Mg, pH, Ca) for bacteria, and vegetation (herbaceous biomass and woody cover) for fungi. Fire and herbivory explained on average 7.5 and 9.8% of the fungal community variability, respectively, compared to 6.0 and 5.6% for bacteria. The relatively small changes in microbial communities due to natural disturbance is in stark contrast to dramatic vegetation and edaphic changes and suggests that soil microbial communities, having evolved with disturbance, are resistant to change. This represents both a buffer to short-term anthropogenic-induced changes and a restoration challenge in the face of long-term changes.
火和食草作用是草本生物群落中的重要自然干扰因素。这两种驱动力都可能影响地下微生物群落,但没有研究揭示过火和食草作用对细菌和真菌群落的长期影响。我们假设,土壤细菌群落通过干扰引起的土壤性质变化(例如 pH 值、养分)发生变化,而土壤真菌群落通过植被的改变(生物量和物种组成)发生变化。为了检验这些想法,我们在南非稀树草原和草原生态系统的六个长期(18 至 70 年)生态研究点,对土壤理化性质(pH 值、酸度、C、N、P 和可交换阳离子含量、质地、体密度、水分)、植物物种丰富度和生物量、微生物生物量以及细菌和真菌群落组成和多样性(分别使用 16S 和 ITS rRNA 扩增子测序)进行了研究。我们发现,火和食草作用模式深刻地改变了土壤理化性质、植物物种丰富度和现存量。在所有的地点,当排除自然干扰时,观察到木质生物量(范围为 12%至 50%)增加。土壤性质变化的强度和方向高度依赖于地形、土壤和气候条件。总的来说,火和食草作用通过不同的驱动力塑造了细菌和真菌群落:细菌受土壤性质(包括 Mg、pH 值、Ca)的影响,真菌受植被(草本生物量和木本覆盖)的影响。火和食草作用分别解释了真菌群落变异性的 7.5%和 9.8%,而细菌仅解释了 6.0%和 5.6%。由于自然干扰,微生物群落的变化相对较小,与植被和土壤性质的剧烈变化形成鲜明对比,这表明土壤微生物群落已经适应了干扰,具有抵抗变化的能力。这既代表了对短期人为诱导变化的缓冲,也代表了在面对长期变化时的恢复挑战。