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Taxonomic and functional biogeography of soil bacteria: importance of environmental filtering and dispersal depends on scale
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  • Liang Qingqing,
  • Mod Heidi,
  • Shuaiwei Luo,
  • Beibei Ma,
  • Yang Kena,
  • Chen Beibei,
  • Wei Qi,
  • Zhao Zhiguang,
  • Guo-Zhen Du,
  • Antoine Guisan,
  • Xiaojun Ma,
  • Xavier Le Roux
Liang Qingqing
Lanzhou University
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Mod Heidi
University of Lausanne
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Shuaiwei Luo
Lanzhou University
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Beibei Ma
Lanzhou University
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Yang Kena
Lanzhou University
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Chen Beibei
Lanzhou University
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Wei Qi
Lanzhou University
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Zhao Zhiguang
Lanzhou University
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Guo-Zhen Du
Lanzhou University
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Antoine Guisan
University of Lausanne
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Xiaojun Ma
Lanzhou University

Corresponding Author:xjma@lzu.edu.cn

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Xavier Le Roux
INRAE
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Abstract

The processes governing soil bacteria biogeography are still not fully understood. It remains unknown how the importance of environmental filtering and dispersal differs between bacterial taxonomic and functional biogeography, and whether their importance is scale-dependent. We sampled soils at 195 plots across the Tibet plateau, with distances among plots ranging from 20 m to 1,550 km. Taxonomic composition of bacterial community was characterized by 16S amplicon sequencing, and functional community composition by qPCR targeting 9 functional groups involved in N dynamics. Twelve climatic and soil characteristics were also measured. Both taxonomic and functional dissimilarities were more related to environmental dissimilarity than geographic distance. Taxonomic dissimilarity was mostly explained by soil pH and organic matter, while functional dissimilarity was mostly linked to moisture, temperature and N, P and C availabilities. The roles of environmental filtering and dispersal were, however, scale-dependent and varied between taxonomic and functional dissimilarities, with distance affecting taxonomic dissimilarity over short distances (<~300 km) and functional dissimilarity over long distances (>~600 km). The importance of different environmental predictors varied across scales more for functional than taxonomic dissimilarity. Our results demonstrate how biodiversity dimension (taxonomic versus functional) and spatial scale strongly influence the conclusions derived of bacterial biogeography.