Molecular Ecology and Evolution Group, School of Science, Edith Cowan University, Joondalup, WA 6027, Australia.
Molecular Ecology and Evolution Group, School of Science, Edith Cowan University, Joondalup, WA 6027, Australia.
Sci Total Environ. 2024 Mar 10;915:170111. doi: 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2024.170111. Epub 2024 Jan 15.
Mediterranean forest ecosystems will be increasingly affected by hotter drought and more frequent and severe wildfire events in the future. However, little is known about the longer-term responses of these forests to multiple disturbances and the forests' capacity to maintain ecosystem function. This is particularly so for below-ground organisms, which have received less attention than those above-ground, despite their essential contributions to forest function. We investigated rhizosphere microbial communities in a resprouting Eucalyptus marginata forest, southwestern Australia, that had experienced a severe wildfire four years previously, and a hotter drought eight years previously. Our aim was to understand how microbial communities are affected over longer-term trajectories by hotter drought and wildfire, singularly, and in combination. Fungal and bacterial DNA was extracted from soil samples, amplified, and subjected to high throughput sequencing. Richness, diversity, composition, and putative functional groups were then examined. We found a monotonic decrease in fungal, but not bacterial, richness and diversity with increasing disturbance with the greatest changes resulting from the combination of drought and wildfire. Overall fungal and bacterial community composition reflected a stronger effect of fire than drought, but the combination of both produced the greatest number of indicator taxa for fungi, and a significant negative effect on the abundance of several fungal functional groups. Key mycorrhizal fungi, fungal saprotrophs and fungal pathogens were found at lower proportions in sites affected by drought plus wildfire. Wildfire had a positive effect on bacterial hydrogen and bacterial nitrogen recyclers. Fungal community composition was positively correlated with live tree height. These results suggest that microbial communities, in particular key fungal functional groups, are highly responsive to wildfire following drought. Thus, a legacy of past climate conditions such as hotter drought can be important for mediating the responses of soil microbial communities to subsequent disturbance like wildfire.
地中海森林生态系统将越来越受到未来更热的干旱和更频繁、更严重的野火事件的影响。然而,对于这些森林对多种干扰的长期响应以及它们维持生态系统功能的能力,人们知之甚少。这对于地下生物尤其如此,尽管它们对森林功能至关重要,但它们受到的关注比地上生物少。我们研究了澳大利亚西南部一个重新发芽的边缘桉树森林的根际微生物群落,该森林四年前经历了一场严重的野火,八年前经历了一场更热的干旱。我们的目的是了解微生物群落如何在更长的时间内受到更热的干旱和野火、单独和组合的影响。从土壤样本中提取真菌和细菌 DNA,进行扩增,并进行高通量测序。然后检查丰富度、多样性、组成和假定的功能群。我们发现,随着干扰的增加,真菌的丰富度和多样性呈单调下降,但细菌的丰富度和多样性没有下降。最显著的变化来自干旱和野火的结合。总的来说,真菌和细菌群落组成反映了火灾对干旱的影响更强,但两者的结合产生了最多的真菌指示分类群,并对几个真菌功能群的丰度产生了显著的负面影响。关键的菌根真菌、真菌腐生菌和真菌病原体在受干旱加野火影响的地点的比例较低。野火对细菌产氢菌和细菌氮循环菌有积极影响。真菌群落组成与活树高度呈正相关。这些结果表明,微生物群落,特别是关键的真菌功能群,对干旱后的野火反应非常敏感。因此,过去气候条件(如更热的干旱)的遗留物对于调节土壤微生物群落对随后的干扰(如野火)的响应非常重要。