Effects of forest conversion and seasonal changes on the assembly of
bacterial and fungal communities in tropical forests
Abstract
To date, few studies have assessed the impact of forest conversion or
seasonal changes on soil microbial community assembly. To fill this
research gap, 16S rRNA and ITS gene sequences were used to evaluate the
effects of forest conversion and seasonal changes on the assembly of
bacterial and fungal communities using 260 soil samples collected from
tropical rainforest and rubber plantation sites across Hainan Island,
South China. A majority (~60%) of observed OTUs
conformed with neutral model expectations, indicating that neutral
processes were important for the assembly of soil microbial communities.
For bacterial communities, the NST (normalized stochasticity ratio) was
higher in the tropical rainforest (0.746 in the dry season, 0.684 in the
rainy season) versus rubber plantation sites (0.647, 0.584), regardless
of season. Thus, forest conversion decreased the importance of
stochasticity for soil bacterial community assembly. For fungal
communities, rubber plantation communities showed greater stochasticity
(NST = 0.578) than rainforest communities (NST = 0.388) in the dry
season, but the reverse was true in the rainy season (NST = 0.852 for
rubber plantations; NST = 0.978 for rainforest). Both the NST results
and structural equation modeling showed that bacterial communities were
more stochastic in the dry season, while fungal communities were more
stochastic in the rainy season; the effects of seasonal changes on
assembly therefore differed between bacterial and fungal communities.
More importantly, forest conversion did not have a direct impact on the
assembly of bacterial or fungal communities, but exerted indirect
effects via soil pH and soil AK.