Data from: Archaea and bacteria mediate the effects of native species root loss on fungi during plant invasion
Although invasive plants can drive ecosystem change, little is known about the directional nature of belowground interactions between invasive plants, native roots, bacteria, archaea and fungi. We used detailed bioinformatics and a recently developed root assay on soils collected in fescue grassland...
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Zusammenfassung: | Although invasive plants can drive ecosystem change, little is known about
the directional nature of belowground interactions between invasive
plants, native roots, bacteria, archaea and fungi. We used detailed
bioinformatics and a recently developed root assay on soils collected in
fescue grassland along a gradient of smooth brome (Bromus inermis Leyss)
invasion to examine the links between smooth brome shoot litter and root,
archaea, bacteria and fungal communities. We examined (1) aboveground
versus belowground influences of smooth brome on soil microbial
communities, (2) the importance of direct versus microbe-mediated impacts
of plants on soil fungal communities, and (3) the web of roots, shoots,
archaea, bacteria and fungi interactions across the A and B soil horizons
in invaded and non-invaded sites. Archaea and bacteria influenced fungal
composition, but not vice versa, as indicated by redundancy analyses.
Co-inertia analyses suggested that bacterial–fungal variance was driven
primarily by 12 bacterial operational taxonomic units (OTUs). Brome
increased bacterial diversity via smooth brome litter in the A horizon and
roots in the B horizon, which then reduced fungal diversity. Archaea
increased abundance of several bacterial OTUs, and the key bacterial OTUs
mediated changes in the fungi’s response to invasion. Overall, native root
diversity loss and bacterial mediation were more important drivers of
fungal composition than were the direct effects of increases in smooth
brome. Critically, native plant species displacement and root loss
appeared to be the most important driver of fungal composition during
invasion. This causal web likely gives rise to the plant–fungi feedbacks,
which are an essential factor determining plant diversity in invaded
grassland ecosystems. |
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DOI: | 10.5061/dryad.00b1d |