Selection of r-K strategies by soil bacterial communities in response to
grassland degradation
Abstract
Numerous studies have investigated bacterial community structure in
grassland ecosystems and bacterial community responses to human
management at various spatial and temporal scales; however, research on
soil bacterial community assembly dynamics in the course of grassland
degradation is limited. Here, the authors investigate the response and
assembly processes of bacterial communities adopted in two grasslands
with different degrees of degradation. Stochastic processes dominated
bacterial community assembly processes in response to grassland
degradation, with the bacterial diversity decreasing; however,
functional gene diversity increased. Furthermore, different phyla
exhibited distinct response strategies: Proteobacteria and
Bacteroidetes, as r-strategists, exhibited positive responses, with
increases in diversity, abundance, and niche width with an increase in
grassland degradation, enhancing biodiversity and productivity; other
phyla (mainly Acidobacteria) exhibited greater phylogenetic dispersion
and functional redundancy, and less niche overlap, highlighting the role
of K-strategy in improving community resource-use efficiency in response
to resource loss in degraded grasslands. The transition from K- to r-
strategy in bacterial communities following grassland degradation could
help communities adapt to environmental disturbance in the form of
nutrient loss. The results of the present study enhance our
understanding of how nutrient loss in natural grassland ecosystems leads
to shifts in bacterial community composition and assembly processes
mediated by different response strategies of different phyla.