Microbiome resilience of Amazonian forests: agroforest divergence to bacteria and secondary forest succession convergence to fungi
Leite, Márcio Fernandes Alves; Liu, Binbin; Cardozo, Ernesto Gómez; E Silva, Hulda Rocha; Luz, Ronildson Lima; Muchavisoy, Karol Henry Mavisoy; Moraes, Flávio Henrique Reis; Rousseau, Guillaume Xavier; Kowalchuk, George; Gehring, Christoph; Kuramae, Eiko Eurya
(2023) Global Change Biology, volume 29, issue 5, pp. 1314 - 1327
(Article)
Abstract
An alarming and increasing deforestation rate threatens Amazon tropical ecosystems and subsequent degradation due to frequent fires. Agroforestry systems (AFS) may offer a sustainable alternative, reportedly mimicking the plant-soil interactions of the natural mature forest (MF). However, the role of microbial community in tropical AFS remains largely unknown. This knowledge
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is crucial for evaluating the sustainability of AFS and practices given the key role of microbes in the aboveground-belowground interactions. The current study, by comparing different AFS and successions of secondary and MFs, showed that AFS fostered distinct groups of bacterial community, diverging from the MFs, likely a result of management practices while secondary forests converged to the same soil microbiome found in the MF, by favoring the same groups of fungi. Model simulations reveal that AFS would require profound changes in aboveground biomass and in soil factors to reach the same microbiome found in MFs. In summary, AFS practices did not result in ecosystems mimicking natural forest plant-soil interactions but rather reshaped the ecosystem to a completely different relation between aboveground biomass, soil abiotic properties, and the soil microbiome.
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Keywords: aboveground–belowground interactions, forest regrowth, homegarden, land-use changes, slash-and-burn agriculture, soil microbiome, tropical rainforest, Global and Planetary Change, Environmental Chemistry, Ecology, General Environmental Science
ISSN: 1354-1013
Publisher: John Wiley & Sons, Ltd (10.1111)
Note: Funding Information: We thank the Federal Colonization and Land Reform Agency (INCRA), Embrapa Eastern‐Amazonia, Movement of the Landless (MST), and the Mixed Agricultural Cooperative of Tomé‐açu (CAMTA) for their invaluable practical and infrastructure support. We thank Jos Raaijmakers for fruitful comments. This research was supported by FAPEMA, Brazilian Council of Higher Education (CAPES No. A080/2013). Publication no. 7496 of the Netherlands Institute of Ecology (NIOO‐KNAW). Funding Information: We thank the Federal Colonization and Land Reform Agency (INCRA), Embrapa Eastern-Amazonia, Movement of the Landless (MST), and the Mixed Agricultural Cooperative of Tomé-açu (CAMTA) for their invaluable practical and infrastructure support. We thank Jos Raaijmakers for fruitful comments. This research was supported by FAPEMA, Brazilian Council of Higher Education (CAPES No. A080/2013). Publication no. 7496 of the Netherlands Institute of Ecology (NIOO-KNAW). Publisher Copyright: © 2022 The Authors. Global Change Biology published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.
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