Abstract
Although microorganisms are the very first colonizers of recently deglaciated soils even prior to plant colonization, the drivers and patterns of microbial community succession at early-successional stages remain poorly understood. The successional dynamics and assembly processes of bacterial and fungal communities were compared on a glacier foreland in the maritime Antarctic across the ~10-year soil-age gradient from bare soil to sparsely vegetated area. Bacterial communities shifted more rapidly than fungal communities in response to glacial retreat; species turnover (primarily the transition from glacier- to soil-favouring taxa) contributed greatly to bacterial beta diversity, but this pattern was less clear in fungi. Bacterial communities underwent more predictable (more deterministic) changes along the soil-age gradient, with compositional changes paralleling the direction of changes in soil physicochemical properties following deglaciation. In contrast, the compositional shift in fungal communities was less associated with changes in deglaciation-induced changes in soil geochemistry and most fungal taxa displayed mosaic abundance distribution across the landscape, suggesting that the successional dynamics of fungal communities are largely governed by stochastic processes. A co-occurrence network analysis revealed that biotic interactions between bacteria and fungi are very weak in early succession. Taken together, these results collectively suggest that bacterial and fungal communities in recently deglaciated soils are largely decoupled from each other during succession and exert very divergent trajectories of succession and assembly under different selective forces.
Original language | English |
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Pages (from-to) | 4231-4244 |
Number of pages | 14 |
Journal | Molecular Ecology |
Volume | 30 |
Issue number | 17 |
DOIs | |
Publication status | Published - 2021 Sept |
Bibliographical note
Funding Information:This study was funded by the Korea Polar Research Institute (PE21130). We are very thankful to Dr Ji Young Jung and Sujeong Jeong for soil analysis, and the 29th overwintering team of the King Sejong Antarctic station for their logistical support. We also thank Dr Junghoon Kim for providing climatic data from the AWS, and Jae Eun So at University of Science & Technology (UST) for the identification of crustose lichens.
Funding Information:
This study was funded by the Korea Polar Research Institute (PE21130). We are very thankful to Dr Ji Young Jung and Sujeong Jeong for soil analysis, and the 29th overwintering team of the King Sejong Antarctic station for their logistical support. We also thank Dr Junghoon Kim for providing climatic data from the AWS, and Jae Eun So at University of Science & Technology (UST) for the identification of crustose lichens.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2021 John Wiley & Sons Ltd
All Science Journal Classification (ASJC) codes
- Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics
- Genetics