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Do plant-soil interactions influence how the microbial community responds to environmental change?

Laurel M BrighamClifton P Bueno de MesquitaJane G SmithSamuel A SartwellSteven K SchmidtKatharine N Suding
Published in: Ecology (2021)
Global change alters ecosystems and their functioning, and biotic interactions can either buffer or amplify such changes. We utilized a long-term nitrogen (N) addition and species removal experiment in the Front Range of Colorado, USA to determine whether a codominant forb and a codominant grass, with different effects on nutrient cycling and plant community structure, would buffer or amplify the effects of simulated N deposition on soil bacterial and fungal communities. While the plant community was strongly shaped by both the presence of dominant species and N addition, we did not find a mediating effect of the plant community on soil microbial response to N. In contrast to our hypothesis, we found a decoupling of the plant and microbial communities such that the soil microbial community shifted under N independently of directional shifts in the plant community. These findings suggest there are not strong cascading effects of N deposition across the plant-soil interface in our system.
Keyphrases
  • microbial community
  • plant growth
  • healthcare
  • cell wall
  • mental health
  • antibiotic resistance genes
  • risk assessment
  • magnetic resonance
  • computed tomography
  • climate change
  • amino acid