Slope Aspect Affects The Soil Microbial Communities In Karst Tiankeng Negative Landforms
Abstract Background: Karst tiankeng is a large-scale negative surface terrain, and slope aspect affect the soil conditions, vegetation and microbial flora in the tiankeng. However, the influence of the slope aspect on the soil microbial community in tiankeng has not been elucidated. Methods: In this study, metagenomic sequencing technology was used to analyzed the soil microbial communities and metabolic function on the shady and sunny slopes of karst tiankeng. Results: The Shannon-Wiener diversity of microbial communities on shady slopes was significantly higher than that on shady slopes. Shady and sunny slopes have similar microbial community composition, but there are differences in abundance. The linear discriminate analysis (LDA) results showed that biomarkers mainly belongs to Actinobacteria, Chloroflexi and Proteobacteria. Functional pathways and CAZy (Carbohydrate-Active Enzymes) genes also had a remarkable response to slope aspect change. LEfSe results indicated several biomarker pathways in sunny slope involved in human disease. Moreover, the abundance of CAZy genes was higher in shady slope and had stronger ability in decomposing litter. The microbial communities were mainly correlation with the vegetation characteristics (species richness and coverage) and soil properties (SOM and pH). Conclusions: These results indicate slope aspect has a pronounced influence on microbial community composition, structure and function at karst tiankeng. In the future, the conservation of karst tiankeng biodiversity should pay more attention to topographical factors.