Pulse Brain · Growing Health Evidence Index
Peer-reviewed

Forest-to-Cropland Conversion Reshapes Microbial Hierarchical Interactions and Degrades Ecosystem Multifunctionality at a National Scale

Long‐Jun Ding, Xinyue Ren, Zhi-Zi Zhou, Dong Zhu, Yong‐Guan Zhu

Environmental Science & Technology · 2024

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Summary

Conversion from natural lands to cropland, primarily driven by agricultural expansion, could significantly alter soil microbiome worldwide; however, influences of forest-to-cropland conversion on microbial hierarchical interactions and ecosystem multifunctionality have not been fully understood. Here, we examined the effects of forest-to-cropland conversion on intratrophic and cross-trophic microbial interactions and soil ecosystem multifunctionality and further disclosed their underlying drivers at a national scale, using Illumina sequencing combined with high-throughput quantitative PCR techniques. The forest-to-cropland conversion significantly changed the structure of soil microbiome (including prokaryotic, fungal, and protistan communities) while it did not affect its alpha diversity.

Subject
Soil biology & microbiology
Source type
Peer-reviewed study
System type
Other
DOI
10.1021/acs.est.4c01203
Catalogue ID
SNmojxdbgs-w0o7kc
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