ABSTRACT Soil microbiomes are fundamental ecosystem components that are increasingly used to monitor the efficacy of restoration efforts. However, given high levels of functional redundancy among soil microbial taxa and the subsequent lack of definitive taxa‐function links, taxonomic assessments (e.g., via metabarcoding) alone are limited for inferring ecological recovery. Here, we used shotgun metagenomics on soils from six post‐agricultural restoration sites in southwest Western Australia to test whether soil microbial functional potential recovers following restoration plantings. We compared taxonomic and functional gene diversity and composition across degraded, passively regenerated, revegetated, and remnant land conditions. Effective number of functions (alpha diversity) did not differ across land conditions. However, functional composition (beta diversity) differed between remnant and revegetated conditions and associated with altered soil abiotic properties, especially elevated phosphorus. Remnant soils supported a greater diversity of phosphorus metabolism functions despite lower available phosphorus, indicating a microbial adaptation to nutrient limitation in phosphorus deficient soils. Rather than indicating a lack of functional recovery, these results suggest a functional response to persistent agricultural legacies that may reflect a shift toward an alternative state. Restoration interventions that aim to target the soil microbiome (e.g., soil inoculations) or directly address abiotic legacies (e.g., phosphorus mining plants) may therefore be required to facilitate recovery of the soil microbial functions and the wider ecosystem.
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Peddle et al. (Thu,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/69a52dbff1e85e5c73bf0d91 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1002/ece3.73172
Shawn D. Peddle
Christian Cando‐Dumancela
Sofie Costin
SHILAP Revista de lepidopterología
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