Microbial network structure, not plant and microbial community diversity, regulates multifunctionality under increased precipitation in a cold steppe

Front Microbiol. 2024 Jan 12:14:1349747. doi: 10.3389/fmicb.2023.1349747. eCollection 2023.

Abstract

It is known that the dynamics of multiple ecosystem functions (i. e., multifunctionality) are positively associated with microbial diversity and/or biodiversity. However, how the relationship between microbial species affects ecosystem multifunctionality remains unclear, especially in the case of changes in precipitation patterns. To explore the contribution of biodiversity and microbial co-occurrence networks to multifunctionality, we used rainfall shelters to simulate precipitation enhancement in a cold steppe in Northeast China over two consecutive growing seasons. We showed that an increased 50% precipitation profoundly reduced bacterial diversity and multidiversity, while inter-annual differences in precipitation did not shift microbial diversity, plant diversity, or multidiversity. Our analyses also revealed that increased annual precipitation significantly increased ecosystem, soil, nitrogen, and phosphorous cycle multifunctionality. Neither increased precipitation nor inter-annual differences in precipitation had a significant effect on carbon cycle multifunctionality, probably due to the relatively short period (2 years) of our experiment. The co-occurrence network of bacterial and fungal communities was the most dominant factor affecting multifunctionality, the numbers of negative interactions but not positive interactions were linked to multifunctionality. In particular, our results provided evidence that microbial network topological features are crucial for maintaining ecosystem functions in grassland ecosystems, which should be considered in related studies to accurately predict the responses of ecosystem multifunctionality to predicted changes in precipitation patterns.

Keywords: biodiversity; co-occurrence ecological networks; ecosystem function; grassland ecosystem; nutrient cycling; rainfall amount.

Grants and funding

The author(s) declare financial support was received for the research, authorship, and/or publication of this article. This work was supported by the Key Projects of Jilin Province Science and Technology Development Plan (20230303008SF), the National Natural Science Foundation of China (32101396, 31870456, and 32001182), the Young Scientist Group Project of Northeast Institute of Geography and Agroecology, Chinese Academy of Sciences (2023QNXZ04), the China Postdoctoral Science Foundation (2023T160640 and 2021M703201), and the Natural Science Foundation of Jilin Province (YDZJ202201ZYTS564 and YDZJ202101ZYTS004). XuecY acknowledges support by the Special Research Assistant Program of the Chinese Academy of Sciences.