Soil bacterial networks are less stable under drought than fungal networks

2018 Nature Communications 1,800 citations

Abstract

Soil microbial communities play a crucial role in ecosystem functioning, but it is unknown how co-occurrence networks within these communities respond to disturbances such as climate extremes. This represents an important knowledge gap because changes in microbial networks could have implications for their functioning and vulnerability to future disturbances. Here, we show in grassland mesocosms that drought promotes destabilising properties in soil bacterial, but not fungal, co-occurrence networks, and that changes in bacterial communities link more strongly to soil functioning during recovery than do changes in fungal communities. Moreover, we reveal that drought has a prolonged effect on bacterial communities and their co-occurrence networks via changes in vegetation composition and resultant reductions in soil moisture. Our results provide new insight in the mechanisms through which drought alters soil microbial communities with potential long-term consequences, including future plant community composition and the ability of aboveground and belowground communities to withstand future disturbances. Drought conditions can alter the composition of soil microbial communities, but the effects of drought on network properties have not been tested. Here, de Vries and colleagues show that co-occurrence networks are destabilised under drought for bacteria but not fungi.

Keywords

MesocosmEcosystemEnvironmental scienceEcologyMicrobial population biologyGrasslandVegetation (pathology)Plant communityClimate changeCommunity structureBiologyEcological succession

MeSH Terms

BacteriaBiomassDroughtsEcosystemFungiModelsBiologicalPlantsSoilSoil Microbiology

Affiliated Institutions

Related Publications

Publication Info

Year
2018
Type
article
Volume
9
Issue
1
Pages
3033-3033
Citations
1800
Access
Closed

Social Impact

Social media, news, blog, policy document mentions

Citation Metrics

1800
OpenAlex
0
Influential

Cite This

Franciska T. de Vries, Robert I. Griffiths, Mark Bailey et al. (2018). Soil bacterial networks are less stable under drought than fungal networks. Nature Communications , 9 (1) , 3033-3033. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-018-05516-7

Identifiers

DOI
10.1038/s41467-018-05516-7
PMID
30072764
PMCID
PMC6072794

Data Quality

Data completeness: 90%