Grazing reshapes the hidden social network of soil microbes
A new study on the Qinghai-Tibet Plateau reveals how livestock grazing fundamentally alters the complex co-occurrence networks of soil microbial communities. Researchers found that grazing consistently enhanced the network complexity of soil prokaryotes, likely by increasing environmental heterogeneity and creating resource pulses while physically disrupting microbial dispersal. In contrast, its effect on fungal network complexity was inconsistent, attributed to the more deterministic assembly of fungal communities. The research also uncovered a spatial pattern where the number of interacting microbial species follows a reverse U-shape, increasing with sampling area up to a tipping point (256 m² for prokaryotes, 64 m² for fungi) before declining. This work provides novel insights into microbial ecology, demonstrating how land management practices like grazing influence species interactions and the spatial architecture of soil microbiomes, which are critical for nutrient cycling and ecosystem stability.
Study Significance: For microbiologists and microbial ecologists, this research directly connects agricultural practices to the structural and functional dynamics of soil microbial communities, a core aspect of host-microbe interactions and ecosystem function. It highlights that management decisions can selectively manipulate prokaryotic network complexity, offering a potential lever for influencing soil health, biodegradation processes, and resilience. Understanding these grazing-induced shifts is crucial for predicting changes in microbial metabolism and community assembly under different land-use scenarios, with implications for sustainable pasture management and broader ecosystem services.
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