Back to Search
Journal ArticleOpen Access

Plant Taxonomic Diversity Better Explains Soil Fungal and Bacterial Diversity than Functional Diversity in Restored Forest Ecosystems

Author Affiliations
Hajee Mohammad Danesh Science and Technology University, South China Botanical Garden, University of Chinese Academy of Sciences, Guangdong Academy of Agricultural Sciences
Published InPlants
Year2019
Citations44

Abstract

Plant attributes have direct and indirect effects on soil microbes via plant inputs and plant-mediated soil changes. However, whether plant taxonomic and functional diversities can explain the soil microbial diversity of restored forest ecosystems remains elusive. Here, we tested the linkage between plant attributes and soil microbial communities in four restored forests (Acacia species, Eucalyptus species, mixed coniferous species, mixed native species). The trait-based approaches were applied for plant properties and high-throughput Illumina sequencing was applied for fungal and bacterial diversity. The total number of soil microbial operational taxonomic units (OTUs) varied among the four forests. The highest richness of fungal OTUs was found in the Acacia forest. However, bacterial OTUs were highest in the Eucalyptus forest. Species richness was…
View at Publisher

BORR does not host full-text PDFs. The button above takes you to the original publisher.