Tropical forest conversion to rubber plantation in southwest China results in lower fungal beta diversity and reduced network complexity

Despite the extensive, ongoing conversion of tropical forests to rubber plantation, the effects of this land-use change on soil fungal community diversity and composition are still poorly known. We compared a network of sites of tropical forest in southern Yunnan, China, with a network of rubber pla...

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Veröffentlicht in:FEMS microbiology ecology 2019-07, Vol.95 (7)
Hauptverfasser: Song, Hokyung, Singh, Dharmesh, Tomlinson, Kyle W, Yang, Xiaodong, Ogwu, Matthew Chidozie, Slik, J W Ferry, Adams, Jonathan M
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Despite the extensive, ongoing conversion of tropical forests to rubber plantation, the effects of this land-use change on soil fungal community diversity and composition are still poorly known. We compared a network of sites of tropical forest in southern Yunnan, China, with a network of rubber plantation sites originally derived from this forest. Soil DNA was amplified for ITS2 and sequenced using Illumina MiSeq. We found that there was a major shift in community composition across all phyla, including a large reduction in ectomycorrhizal fungi likely related to the absence of hosts. Conversion from forest to rubber plantation had no effect on total fungal α-diversity, but rubber plantation had lower β-diversity, resulting in lower overall gamma diversity. Networks based on co-occurrence of operational taxonomic unit in each land-use type showed that network complexity decreased with land-use change from forest to rubber plantation. Further investigation of soil functionality is needed to investigate whether this lower network complexity is related to reduced soil ecosystem resilience.
ISSN:1574-6941
0168-6496
1574-6941
DOI:10.1093/femsec/fiz092