Functional diversity of soil microbial communities increases with ecosystem development

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Abstract

Land abandonment is the single largest process of land-use change in the Global North driving succession and afforestation at continental scales, but assessing its impacts on soil microbial communities remains a challenge. Here, we established a nationwide successional gradient of paired grassland and forest sites to track developments in microbial structure and functioning following land abandonment and gradually changing plant communities. We show that microbes generally respond through threshold dynamics, leading to increasing functional but decreasing taxonomic diversity. Succession also increased the specialization of microbial nutrient (C-N-P) cycling genes while decreasing genetic redundancy, highlighting a putative trade-off between two desirable ecosystem properties: functional diversity and functional redundancy. Increasing fungal functional diversity underpinned higher microbial C-cycling capacity, underscoring the causal link between functional traits and ecosystem processes. Changing litter quality similarly provided a mechanistic link between plant and microbial communities despite otherwise largely decoupled successional developments. Land abandonment is frequently touted as an opportunity to increase biodiversity and carbon storage. Our results show that deeper knowledge about the multifaceted development of soil microbial communities and its links to plant communities during succession may be needed to fully grasp the impacts of global land abandonment processes.

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