Corpse decomposition affects soil organisms through the formation of "cadaver decomposition islands." Soil diazotrophic microbes possess essential ecological functions on nitrogen input and nutrient cycling in the terrestrial ecosystem. However, our knowledge about how soil diazotrophic communities respond to corpse decomposition is lacking. In this study, we focused on the succession patterns and biological interaction of nitrogen-fixing microorganisms during animal (Ochotona curzoniae) corpse decomposition in terrestrial ecosystems by targeting nifH gene with high-throughput sequencing. Our results revealed that corpse decomposition of pikas reduced the α diversity and significantly impacted the β diversity of diazotrophic community across different decomposition stages. The divergent succession of diazotrophic community occurred under corpse pressure. Furthermore, the relative importance of stochasticity to the community assembly was improved by corpse decomposition, while the importance decreased over decomposition time. Cadaver decay also simplified the diazotrophic networks and weakened the biological interactions among diazotrophic populations. Notably, NH4-N was the most important factor affecting diazotrophic community, followed by time and total carbon. This work emphasized that corpse decomposition perhaps influences the process of biological nitrogen fixation by altering soil diazotrophic communities, which is of great significance for understanding the terrestrial ecosystems' nitrogen cycle functions. KEY POINTS: • Corpse decomposition reduced the α diversity of diazotrophic community. • Corpse decomposition improved the stochasticity of diazotrophic community assembly. • Corpse decomposition weakened the interactions among diazotrophic populations.
Keywords: Community assembly; Corpse decomposition; Diazotrophs; Network analysis; Terrestrial ecosystem.
© 2024. The Author(s).