Plant community composition and traits modulate the impacts of drought intensity on soil microbial community composition and function

Oram, Natalie J. and Brennan, Fiona and Praeg, Nadine and Bardgett, Richard D. and Illmer, Paul and Ingrisch, Johannes and Bahn, Michael (2025) Plant community composition and traits modulate the impacts of drought intensity on soil microbial community composition and function. Soil Biology and Biochemistry, 200: 109644. ISSN 0038-0717

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Abstract

Terrestrial ecosystems are increasingly threatened by extreme drought events. Soil microbial communities are central to terrestrial ecosystem function via their role in regulating biogeochemical cycling. Consequently, the impact of increasingly intense drought events on soil microbial communities will have knock-on effects for how ecosystems cope with climate change. In an outdoor grassland mesocosm experiment, we determined how increasing drought intensity affects bacterial and fungal community composition, and functioning, during and after drought. We also tested whether plant community resource acquisition strategy (fast-versus slow-strategy plant communities), plant community composition, and plant functional traits mediate soil microbial responses to increasing drought intensity. We found that increasing drought intensity markedly shifted bacterial and fungal community composition, and these effects persisted until the end of the experiment (two months after re-wetting). Bacterial and fungal communities that experienced severe droughts did not return to baseline composition, while those that experienced a mild drought did. Microbial community functioning (potential extracellular enzyme activity) was reduced at peak drought and shortly after re-wetting. While drought intensity effects on bacterial or fungal communities were insensitive to plant community resource acquisition strategy, functional group abundance (aboveground biomass of grass or forb plant species) composition (grass:forb ratio) and leaf traits (leaf dry matter content and leaf nitrogen concentration) explained significant variation in bacterial and fungal community composition during and after drought. Notably, plant community leaf dry matter content and soil nitrogen were the key factors mediating the effect of increasing drought intensity on microbial indicator taxa (ASVs). We conclude that increasing drought intensity affects grassland soil microbial communities during and after drought, and this impact is influenced by plant community composition and functional traits.

Item Type:
Journal Article
Journal or Publication Title:
Soil Biology and Biochemistry
Additional Information:
Publisher Copyright: © 2024 The Authors
Uncontrolled Keywords:
/dk/atira/pure/subjectarea/asjc/2400/2404
Subjects:
?? climate changeplant functional traitspotential extracellular enzyme activitysoil microbiomemicrobiologysoil science ??
ID Code:
227903
Deposited By:
Deposited On:
06 Mar 2025 15:45
Refereed?:
Yes
Published?:
Published
Last Modified:
06 Mar 2025 15:45