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Wildfires are unpredictable disturbances with profound effects on soil properties and microbial communities within forest ecosystems. However, knowledge of post-fire microbial communities in karst forests remains limited. In this study, microbial amplicon sequencing techniques were employed to investigate the impact of wildfires on the composition, diversity, function, and co-occurrence network of soil microbial communities in karst forest landscapes and to identify the key soil physicochemical factors affecting the post-fire microbial communities. The wildfire affected the fungal community to a greater extent than the bacterial community, with the former shifting from a dominance of Basidiomycota to Ascomycota at the phylum level, while the relative abundance of Actinobacteria increased significantly in the bacterial community. Moreover, the wildfire increased the α-diversity of the microbial community and changed the β-diversity. Network analysis indicated significant reductions in the complexity of microbial community networks and the hub microbiome in burned soils compared to those of unburned soils. Functional predictions indicated an increase in the highly abundant functional taxa of chemoheterotrophic and aerobic chemoheterotrophic bacteria, along with a significant rise in saprotrophic functional fungal taxa following the fire. In addition, soil organic matter, total nitrogen, total phosphorus, and soil water content emerged as key soil physicochemical factors affecting post-fire soil microbial communities in the karst forest. Overall, this study revealed the structural and functional characteristics of soil microbial communities and their key influencing factors after a fire in a karst forest, which will provide a valuable theoretical basis for ecosystem restoration after a wildfire. IMPORTANCE Despite the significant impacts of wildfires on forest ecosystems, most existing studies have largely focused on boreal and Mediterranean coniferous forest types, with limited research on the impacts of coniferous and broadleaf forest types in subtropical karst regions. This study reveals the effects of wildfires on soil microbial communities of coniferous and broadleaf forest types in a karst forest. The results of this study not only improve the understanding of the effects of wildfires on the composition, diversity, function, and network of soil microbial communities but also provide a meaningful theoretical basis for post-fire ecosystem restoration in the karst forest.
Wildfires are unpredictable disturbances with profound effects on soil properties and microbial communities within forest ecosystems. However, knowledge of post-fire microbial communities in karst forests remains limited. In this study, microbial amplicon sequencing techniques were employed to investigate the impact of wildfires on the composition, diversity, function, and co-occurrence network of soil microbial communities in karst forest landscapes and to identify the key soil physicochemical factors affecting the post-fire microbial communities. The wildfire affected the fungal community to a greater extent than the bacterial community, with the former shifting from a dominance of Basidiomycota to Ascomycota at the phylum level, while the relative abundance of Actinobacteria increased significantly in the bacterial community. Moreover, the wildfire increased the α-diversity of the microbial community and changed the β-diversity. Network analysis indicated significant reductions in the complexity of microbial community networks and the hub microbiome in burned soils compared to those of unburned soils. Functional predictions indicated an increase in the highly abundant functional taxa of chemoheterotrophic and aerobic chemoheterotrophic bacteria, along with a significant rise in saprotrophic functional fungal taxa following the fire. In addition, soil organic matter, total nitrogen, total phosphorus, and soil water content emerged as key soil physicochemical factors affecting post-fire soil microbial communities in the karst forest. Overall, this study revealed the structural and functional characteristics of soil microbial communities and their key influencing factors after a fire in a karst forest, which will provide a valuable theoretical basis for ecosystem restoration after a wildfire. IMPORTANCE Despite the significant impacts of wildfires on forest ecosystems, most existing studies have largely focused on boreal and Mediterranean coniferous forest types, with limited research on the impacts of coniferous and broadleaf forest types in subtropical karst regions. This study reveals the effects of wildfires on soil microbial communities of coniferous and broadleaf forest types in a karst forest. The results of this study not only improve the understanding of the effects of wildfires on the composition, diversity, function, and network of soil microbial communities but also provide a meaningful theoretical basis for post-fire ecosystem restoration in the karst forest.
Karst tiankeng is a typical terrestrial habitat island-like system, known as an oasis in a degraded karst landscape. However, we know little about the composition, structure, and life strategies of soil microbial communities in the karst tiankeng ecosystem. In this study, we use amplicon sequencing to investigate the soil bacteria and fungi of 26 karst tiankeng in two typical karst tiankeng groups. The results showed that the composition and structure of bacterial and fungal communities were significantly different at two dimensions (among and within the karst tiankeng group). Bacteria showed more sensitivity to variation in the karst tiankeng area and isolation than fungi. With the increase of karst tiankeng area and isolation, the bacterial life strategies shift from K -strategist to r -strategist, likely due to the changes in soil properties (total phosphorus, Ca, and soil water content). Abundant and rare taxa play different roles in karst tiankeng ecosystems; abundant taxa serve a key role in nutrient cycles and life strategy shifts by occupying the key status in networks. Considering the key role of soil microbes in ecosystems, more attention must be paid to the impact of habitat loss on soil microbial life strategies, particularly in the ecological impact of life strategies change of abundant and rare taxa. IMPORTANCE These findings highlight that habitat loss or fragmentation induces a shift in microbial life strategies and improves our understanding of the composition and biogeography of karst ecosystem microorganisms.
The distributional characteristics of microorganisms in karst cave ecosystems have been widely studied. However, in such a dark, humid, and oligotrophic habitat, studies on the differences in carbon-sequestering bacteria in multiple habitats are limited. Therefore, to learn the distribution characteristics of carbon-sequestering colonies in cave habitats and their correlation with habitat factors (e.g., pH, Ca2+, Mg2+, etc.), samples from five cave habitats (weathered rock walls, underground river water, drips, sediments, and air) were collected from the twilight and dark zones of Shiziyan Cave (CO2 concentration 5385 ppm). The results of high-throughput sequencing and statistical analyses showed that there were significant differences in the distribution of communities in different habitats, with higher abundance in sediments habitat and underground river water habitat, and the dominant phyla of Pseudomonadota (30.53%) and Cyanobacteria (75.11%) in these two habitats. The microbial diversity of the carbon-sequestering microbial community was higher in sediments than in underground river water. The pH, and Ca2+, SO42−, and NO3− concentrations can alter the diversity of carbon-sequestering microbes, thereby affecting carbon cycling in caves. Carbon metabolism analyses suggest that microbes in the habitat can cooperate and coexist by participating in different carbon metabolic pathways. These results expanded our understanding of carbon-sequestering microbial communities in cave systems and their responses to the environment.
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