This study investigated the potential role of a nitrogen-fixing early-coloniser Alnus Nepalensis D. Don (alder) in driving the changes in soil bacterial communities during secondary succession. We found that bacterial diversity was positively associated with alder growth during course of ecosystem development. Alder development elicited multiple changes in bacterial community composition and ecological networks. For example, the initial dominance of actinobacteria within bacterial community transitioned to the dominance of proteobacteria with stand development. Ecological networks approximating species associations tend to stabilize with alder growth. Janthinobacterium lividum, Candidatus Xiphinematobacter and Rhodoplanes were indicator spe...
© 2016, Springer International Publishing Switzerland.Objectives: Afforestation changes soil chemica...
Abstract Deciduous and evergreen trees differ in their responses to drought and nitrogen (N) demand....
Nitrogen-fixing tree species have been shown to improve site fertility and increase N transformation...
This study investigated the potential role of a nitrogen-fixing early-coloniser Alnus Nepalensis D. ...
Past research demonstrating the importance plant–microbe interactions as drivers of ecosystem succes...
Through litter inputs, root exudates, and the resulting changes in soil chemistry, plants directly i...
Given the vast diversity of microorganisms and their relevance for environmental and human health, t...
The effects of natural succession on plant communities and soil variables have been established, but...
Secondary succession studies have mainly focused on plants, but little is known about the fate of so...
The ecological mechanisms driving community succession are widely debated, particularly for microorg...
Proper quantification of the relative influence of soil and plant host on the root-associated microb...
Succession of microbial and plant communities is crucial for the development and the stability of s...
ABSTRACT It is well known that rhizosphere microbiomes differ from those of surrounding soil, and ye...
Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/116975/1/ecy201596123374.pd
Understanding the contribution of ecological processes structuring microbial communities and predict...
© 2016, Springer International Publishing Switzerland.Objectives: Afforestation changes soil chemica...
Abstract Deciduous and evergreen trees differ in their responses to drought and nitrogen (N) demand....
Nitrogen-fixing tree species have been shown to improve site fertility and increase N transformation...
This study investigated the potential role of a nitrogen-fixing early-coloniser Alnus Nepalensis D. ...
Past research demonstrating the importance plant–microbe interactions as drivers of ecosystem succes...
Through litter inputs, root exudates, and the resulting changes in soil chemistry, plants directly i...
Given the vast diversity of microorganisms and their relevance for environmental and human health, t...
The effects of natural succession on plant communities and soil variables have been established, but...
Secondary succession studies have mainly focused on plants, but little is known about the fate of so...
The ecological mechanisms driving community succession are widely debated, particularly for microorg...
Proper quantification of the relative influence of soil and plant host on the root-associated microb...
Succession of microbial and plant communities is crucial for the development and the stability of s...
ABSTRACT It is well known that rhizosphere microbiomes differ from those of surrounding soil, and ye...
Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/116975/1/ecy201596123374.pd
Understanding the contribution of ecological processes structuring microbial communities and predict...
© 2016, Springer International Publishing Switzerland.Objectives: Afforestation changes soil chemica...
Abstract Deciduous and evergreen trees differ in their responses to drought and nitrogen (N) demand....
Nitrogen-fixing tree species have been shown to improve site fertility and increase N transformation...