生物
非生物成分
生态学
分类等级
生物扩散
生物地理学
生物多样性
β多样性
地理距离
植物群落
高原(数学)
空间生态学
生态演替
人口
分类单元
数学分析
社会学
人口学
数学
作者
Qingqing Liang,Heidi K. Mod,Shuaiwei Luo,Binyun Ma,Kena Yang,Beibei Chen,Wei Qi,Zhigang Zhao,Guozhen Du,Antoine Guisan,Xiaojun Ma,Xavier Le Roux
摘要
Abstract The processes governing soil bacteria biogeography are still not fully understood. It remains unknown how the importance of environmental filtering and dispersal differs between bacterial taxonomic and functional biogeography, and whether their importance is scale‐dependent. We sampled soils across the Tibet plateau, with distances among plots ranging from 20 m to 1550 km. Taxonomic composition of bacterial community was characterized by 16S amplicon sequencing and functional community composition by qPCR targeting 9 functional groups involved in N dynamics. Factors representing climate, soil and plant community were measured to assess different facets of environmental dissimilarity. Both bacterial taxonomic and functional dissimilarities were more related to abiotic dissimilarity than biotic (vegetation) dissimilarity or distance. Taxonomic dissimilarity was mostly explained by differences in soil pH and mean annual temperature (MAT), while functional dissimilarity was linked to differences in soil N and P availabilities and N:P ratio. Soil pH and MAT remained the main determinants of taxonomic dissimilarity across spatial scales. In contrast, the explanatory variables of N‐related functional dissimilarity varied across the scales, with soil moisture and organic matter having the highest role across short distances (<~330 km), and available P, N:P ratio and distance being important over long distances (>~660 km). Our results demonstrate how biodiversity dimension (taxonomic versus functional aspects) and spatial scale influence the factors driving soil bacterial biogeography.
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