The ecological processes that influence biogeographical patterns of microorganisms are actively debated. To investigate how such patterns emerge during ecosystem succession, we examined the biogeochemical drivers of bacterial community assembly in soils over two environmentally distinct, recently deglaciated chronosequences separated by a distance of more than 1,300 kilometers. Our results show that despite different geographic, climatic, and soil chemical and physical characteristics at the two sites, soil bacterial community structure and decomposer function converged during plant succession. In a comparative analysis, we found that microbial communities in early succession soils were compositionally distinct from a group of diverse, mature forest soils, but that the differences between successional soils and mature soils decreased from early to late stages of succession. Differences in bacterial community composition across glacial sites were largely explained by pH. However, successional patterns and community convergence across sites were more consistently related to soil organic carbon and organic matter chemistry, which appeared to be tightly coupled with bacterial community structure across both young and mature soils.
Published: March 6, 2022
Citation
Castle S.C., D.R. Nemergut, A. Grandy, J.W. Leff, E.B. Graham, E. Hood, and S.K. Schmidt, et al. 2016.Biogeochemical drivers of microbial community convergence across actively retreating glaciers.Soil Biology and Biochemistry 101.PNNL-SA-120239.doi:10.1016/j.soilbio.2016.07.010