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Grazing decouples the plant-soil microbe linkage in fragile grasslands
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  • Weidong Kong,
  • Hao Chen,
  • Jianshuang Wu,
  • Tianqi Zhou,
  • Hongzeng Jia,
  • Linayn Yue,
  • Chao Liang,
  • Thulani Makhalanyane,
  • Donald Cowan,
  • Xianzhuo Zhang,
  • Tao Wang,
  • Yong-guan Zhu
Weidong Kong
Chinese Academy of Sciences

Corresponding Author:[email protected]

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Hao Chen
Chinese Academy of Sciences
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Jianshuang Wu
Chinese Academy of Agricultural Sciences Institute of Environment and Sustainable Development in Agriculture
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Tianqi Zhou
Chinese Academy of Sciences
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Hongzeng Jia
Chinese Academy of Sciences
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Linayn Yue
Chinese Academy of Sciences
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Chao Liang
Institute of Applied Ecology Chinese Academy of Sciences
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Thulani Makhalanyane
University of Pretoria
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Donald Cowan
University of Pretoria
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Xianzhuo Zhang
Geographic Sciences and Natural Resources Research, Chinese Academy of Sciences
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Tao Wang
Chinese Academy of Sciences
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Yong-guan Zhu
Chinese Academy of Sciences
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Abstract

Plant-soil microbe linkage is theoretically positive, but rarely observed in natural ecosystems. We hypothesized that animal grazing decouples this linkage, for plant removal usually decreases plant influences on soil microbiota. We tested the hypothesis by exploring plant and soil microbial diversity in grazed versus non-grazed grasslands along a gradient of plant diversity. Grazing slightly decreased the diversity of plants and soil microbes in high-diversity sites, but increased them in low-diversity sites. Plant and microbial diversity positively correlated in non-grazed grasslands (P < 0.001), but not in grazed grasslands, indicating that grazing decoupled the biodiversity linkage. The decoupling was attributed to the change of the principal driver of soil microbiota from plant variables in non-grazed grasslands to soil variables in grazed grasslands. The diversity decoupling was also characterized by reduced plant-microbe interactions and lower heterogeneity in grazed grasslands. Our findings provide significant insights into the cross-biota linkages in grassland ecosystems.