Functional redundancy buffers the effect of poly-extreme environmental conditions on southern African dryland soil microbial communities

Sauma-Sanchez, Tomas; Alcorta, Jaime; Tamayo-Leiva, Javier; Diez, Beatriz; Bezuidenhout, Hugo; Cowan, Don A.; Ramond, Jean-Baptiste

Abstract

--- - Drylands' poly-extreme conditions limit edaphic microbial diversity and functionality. Furthermore, climate change exacerbates soil desiccation and salinity in most drylands. To better understand the potential effects of these changes on dryland microbial communities, we evaluated their taxonomic and functional diversities in two Southern African dryland soils with contrasting aridity and salinity. Fungal community structure was significantly influenced by aridity and salinity, while Bacteria and Archaea only by salinity. Deterministic homogeneous selection was significantly more important for bacterial and archaeal communities' assembly in hyperarid and saline soils when compared to those from arid soils. This suggests that niche partitioning drives bacterial and archaeal communities' assembly under the most extreme conditions. Conversely, stochastic dispersal limitations drove the assembly of fungal communities. Hyperarid and saline soil communities exhibited similar potential functional capacities, demonstrating a disconnect between microbial structure and function. Structure variations could be functionally compensated by different taxa with similar functions, as implied by the high levels of functional redundancy. Consequently, while environmental selective pressures shape the dryland microbial community assembly and structures, they do not influence their potential functionality. This suggests that they are functionally stable and that they could be functional even under harsher conditions, such as those expected with climate change. - Salinity and aridity shape the assembly and structures, but not the potential functionality, of microbial communities from Southern African dryland soils.

Más información

Título según WOS: ID WOS:001375213300001 Not found in local WOS DB
Título de la Revista: FEMS MICROBIOLOGY ECOLOGY
Volumen: 100
Número: 12
Editorial: OXFORD UNIV PRESS
Fecha de publicación: 2024
DOI:

10.1093/femsec/fiae157

Notas: ISI