Variations in soil fungal communities: Comparative insights from coniferous and mixed broadleaf-conifer forests

Soil fungal communities are intricately linked to their vegetative hosts, playing a crucial role in plant development, biogeochemical cycling, and the stability of forest ecosystems. Distinct forest types harbor unique soil fungal assemblages, each finely tuned to the prevailing environmental condit...

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Veröffentlicht in:Pedobiologia 2024-11, Vol.107, p.151007, Article 151007
Hauptverfasser: Chen, Dexing, Zhang, Qiongyi, Chen, Siyu, Lin, Yuqing, Zhu, Yuanming, Sun, Weiwei, Chen, Mingjiu, Zou, Shuangquan, Qian, Xin
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Soil fungal communities are intricately linked to their vegetative hosts, playing a crucial role in plant development, biogeochemical cycling, and the stability of forest ecosystems. Distinct forest types harbor unique soil fungal assemblages, each finely tuned to the prevailing environmental conditions and plant species, thereby fulfilling diverse ecological functions. This study used high-throughput sequencing methodologies to conduct an exhaustive assessment of the community structure, ecological process, and interaction networks of soil fungi within coniferous and mixed broadleaf-conifer forests. Our findings demonstrated significant differences in community structure across different functional groups (pathotroph, saprotroph, and symbiotroph) between mixed broadleaf-conifer forests and coniferous forests. The community structure of forest soil fungi was profoundly shaped by soil physicochemical attributes, including pH, organic matter, total phosphorus, and available nitrogen. The neutral community model indicated that stochastic processes were dominant in the structuring of fungal communities in both forest types; however, the proportion of deterministic processes was substantially greater in coniferous forests compared to mixed broadleaf-conifer forests. Furthermore, the soil fungal network structure in mixed broadleaf-conifer forests exhibited greater complexity compared to coniferous forests, with significant associations identified between specific soil physicochemical properties and the topological characteristics of fungal interaction networks in both forest types. These findings underscore the critical impact of forest type on the dynamics of soil fungal communities and their ecological functions, offering strategic insights for forest management practices that enhance ecosystem resilience and biodiversity conservation. •Mixed broadleaf-conifer forests exhibit higher soil fungal diversity than coniferous forests.•Soil fungal network in mixed broadleaf-conifer forests is more complex than in coniferous forests.•Deterministic processes were more prominent in coniferous forests than in mixed forests.
ISSN:0031-4056
DOI:10.1016/j.pedobi.2024.151007