Eukaryotes contribute more than bacteria to the recovery of freshwater ecosystem functions under different drought durations.

Environ Microbiol

Center for Eco-Environmental Research, Nanjing Hydraulic Research Institute, National Energy Administration, Ministry of Transport, Ministry of Water Resources, 210029, Nanjing, China.

Published: July 2023

AI Article Synopsis

  • Global climate change is significantly affecting river ecosystems by altering microbial biodiversity and ecological functions, particularly in intermittent rivers and ephemeral streams (IRES).
  • The study involved experimenting with artificial stream channels to observe how different drought lengths (25 and 90 days) followed by rewetting impact microbial biodiversity recovery and ecosystem functions like metabolism and denitrification rates.
  • Results showed that eukaryotic biodiversity is more sensitive to drought than bacterial biodiversity, and it has a stronger influence on ecosystem functions after prolonged drought periods, highlighting the critical role of eukaryotic diversity in the biodiversity-ecosystem-function relationship.

Article Abstract

Global climate change mostly impacts river ecosystems by affecting microbial biodiversity and ecological functions. Considering the high functional redundancy of microorganisms, the unknown relationship between biodiversity and ecosystem functions obstructs river ecological research, especially under the influence of increasing weather extremes, such as in intermittent rivers and ephemeral streams (IRES). Herein, dry-wet alternation experiments were conducted in artificial stream channels for 25 and 90 days of drought, both followed by 20 days of rewetting. The dynamic recovery of microbial biodiversity and ecosystem functions (represented by ecosystem metabolism and denitrification rate) were determined to analyse biodiversity-ecosystem-function (BEF) relationships after different drought durations. There was a significant difference between bacterial and eukaryotic biodiversity recovery after drought. Eukaryotic biodiversity was more sensitive to drought duration than bacterial, and the eukaryotic network was more stable under dry-wet alternations. Based on the establishment of partial least squares path models, we found that eukaryotic biodiversity has a stronger effect on ecosystem functions than bacteria after long-term drought. Indeed, this work represents a significant step forward for further research on the ecosystem functions of IRES, especially emphasizing the importance of eukaryotic biodiversity in the BEF relationship.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/1462-2920.16370DOI Listing

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