Does microbial habitat or community structure drive the functional stability of microbes to stresses following re-vegetation of a severely degraded soil?

被引:85
作者
Zhang, Bin [1 ,2 ]
Deng, Huan [2 ,3 ]
Wang, Hui-li [2 ,3 ]
Yin, Rui [2 ]
Hallett, Paul D. [4 ]
Griffiths, Bryan S. [4 ]
Daniell, Tim J. [4 ]
机构
[1] Chinese Acad Agr Sci, Key Lab Plant Nutr & Nutrient Cycling, Minist Agr China, Inst Agr Resources & Reg Planning, Beijing 100081, Peoples R China
[2] Chinese Acad Sci, State Key Lab Soil & Sustainable Agr, Inst Soil Sci, Nanjing 210008, Peoples R China
[3] Chinese Acad Sci, Grad Univ, Beijing 100049, Peoples R China
[4] Scottish Crop Res Inst, Environm Plant Interact Programme, Dundee DD2 5DA, Scotland
基金
爱尔兰科学基金会;
关键词
Plant restoration; Bacterial community structure; Soil microbial resilience; Soil microbial resistance; Soil physical stability; Soil aggregation; AGGREGATE STABILITY; ORGANIC-MATTER; DIVERSITY; RESTORATION; RESILIENCE; BIOMASS; BIODIVERSITY; STABILIZATION; GRASSLAND; POLLUTION;
D O I
10.1016/j.soilbio.2010.02.004
中图分类号
S15 [土壤学];
学科分类号
090301 [土壤学];
摘要
Re-vegetation of eroded soil restores organic carbon concentrations and improves the physical stability of the soil, which may then extend the range of microhabitats and influence soil microbial activity and functional stability through its effects on soil bacterial community structure. The objectives of this study were (i) to evaluate the restorative effect of re-vegetation on soil physical stability, microbial activity and bacterial community structure; (ii) to examine the effects of soil physical microhabitats on bacterial community structure and diversity and on soil microbial functional stability. Soil samples were collected from an 18-year-old eroded bare soil restored with either Cinnamomum camphora ("Eroded Cc") or Lespedeza bicolour ("Eroded Lb"). An uneroded soil planted with Pinus massoniana ("Uneroded Pm") and an eroded bare soil served as references. The effect of microhabitats was assessed by physical destruction with a wet shaking treatment. Soil bacterial community structure and diversity were measured using a terminal restriction fragment length polymorphism (T-RFLP) approach, while soil microbiological stability (resistance and resilience) was determined by measuring short-term (28 days) decomposition rate of added barley (Hordeum vulgare) powder following copper and heat perturbations. The results demonstrated that re-vegetation treatment affected the recovery of physical and biological stability, microbial decomposition and the bacterial community structure. Although the restored soils overshot the Uneroded Pm sample in physical stability, they had lower microbial decomposition and less resilience to copper and heat perturbations than the Uneroded Pm samples. Soil physical destruction by shaking had the same effect on soil physical stability, but different effects on soil microbial functional stability. There were significant effects of vegetation treatment and perturbation type, and interactive effects among vegetation treatment, shaking and perturbation type on bacterial community structure. The destruction of aggregate structure increased resilience of the Eroded Lb sample and also altered its bacterial community structure. Both copper and heat perturbations resulted in significantly different community structure from the unperturbed controls, with a larger effect of copper than heat perturbation. Bacterial diversity (Shannon index) increased following the perturbations, with a more profound effect in the Uneroded Pm sample than in the restored soils. The interactive effects of vegetation treatment and shaking on microbial community and stability suggest that soil aggregation may contribute to the generation of bacterial community structure and mediation of biological stability via the protection afforded by soil organic carbon. Differential effects of re-vegetation treatment suggest that the long-term effects are mediated through changes in the quality and quantity of C inputs to soil. (C) 2010 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
引用
收藏
页码:850 / 859
页数:10
相关论文
共 58 条
[1]
Ecosystem thermal buffer capacity as an indicator of the restoration status of protected areas in the northern Ethiopian highlands [J].
Aerts, R ;
Wagendorp, T ;
November, E ;
Behailu, M ;
Deckers, J ;
Muys, B .
RESTORATION ECOLOGY, 2004, 12 (04) :586-596
[2]
[Anonymous], KEYS SOIL TAX
[3]
Functional microbial diversity in regenerating cutover peatlands responds to vegetation succession [J].
Artz, Rebekka R. E. ;
Chapman, Stephen J. ;
Siegenthaler, Andy ;
Mitchell, Edward A. D. ;
Buttler, Alexandre ;
Bortoluzzi, Estelle ;
Gilbert, Daniel ;
Yli-Petays, Mika ;
Vasander, Harri ;
Francez, Andre-Jean .
JOURNAL OF APPLIED ECOLOGY, 2008, 45 (06) :1799-1809
[4]
Evaluating soil stabilisation by biological processes using step-wise aggregate fractionation [J].
Ashman, M. R. ;
Hallett, P. D. ;
Brookes, P. C. ;
Allen, J. .
SOIL & TILLAGE RESEARCH, 2009, 102 (02) :209-215
[5]
Effect of heat-induced disturbance on microbial biomass and activity in forest soil and the relationship between disturbance effects and microbial community structure [J].
Banning, Natasha C. ;
Murphy, Daniel V. .
APPLIED SOIL ECOLOGY, 2008, 40 (01) :109-119
[6]
Examination of four methods for measuring soil respiration [J].
Bekku, Y ;
Koizumi, H ;
Oikawa, T ;
Iwaki, H .
APPLIED SOIL ECOLOGY, 1997, 5 (03) :247-254
[7]
Organic matter enrichment and aggregate stabilization in a severely degraded ultisol after reforestation [J].
Bin, Zhang ;
Peng Xin-Hua .
PEDOSPHERE, 2006, 16 (06) :699-706
[8]
Cairns J., 1999, AQUAT ECOSYST HEALTH, V2, P91, DOI DOI 10.1080/14634989908656944
[9]
16S rRNA gene analyses of bacterial community structures in the soils of evergreen broad-leaved forests in south-west China [J].
Chan, On Chim ;
Yang, Xiaodong ;
Fu, Yun ;
Feng, Zhili ;
Sha, Liqing ;
Casper, Peter ;
Zou, Xiaoming .
FEMS MICROBIOLOGY ECOLOGY, 2006, 58 (02) :247-259
[10]
EFFECTS OF HEAVY-METALS FROM PAST APPLICATIONS OF SEWAGE-SLUDGE ON MICROBIAL BIOMASS AND ORGANIC-MATTER ACCUMULATION IN A SANDY LOAM AND SILTY LOAM UK SOIL [J].
CHANDER, K ;
BROOKES, PC .
SOIL BIOLOGY & BIOCHEMISTRY, 1991, 23 (10) :927-932