4.6 Review

Embracing mountain microbiome and ecosystem functions under global change

Journal

NEW PHYTOLOGIST
Volume 234, Issue 6, Pages 1987-2002

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/nph.18051

Keywords

biodiversity; drivers; ecosystem functions; elevational gradients; global change; manipulated experiments; meta-ecosystems; microorganisms

Categories

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [42077052, 41825016, 41871048, 91851117]
  2. Second Tibetan Plateau Scientific Expedition and Research Program [2019QZKK0503]
  3. Research Program of Sino-Africa Joint Research Center, Chinese Academy of Sciences [151542KYSB20210007]
  4. National Key Research and Development Program of China [2017YFA0605203, 2019YFA0607100]
  5. CAS Key Research Program of Frontier Sciences [QYZDB-SSW-DQC043]
  6. National Geographic (Air and Water Conservation Fund) [GEFC12-14]
  7. NIGLAS

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Mountains are crucial for maintaining habitat heterogeneity, biodiversity, ecosystem functions, and providing services to humans. Over the past decade, there has been significant progress in studying microbial diversity on mountainsides. Microbial communities exhibit climate zonation along elevational gradients, and species richness patterns are driven by deterministic processes influenced by abiotic and biotic factors. Current research is shifting towards understanding the mechanisms shaping microbial biogeographical patterns and their responses to global change.
Mountains are pivotal to maintaining habitat heterogeneity, global biodiversity, ecosystem functions and services to humans. They have provided classic model natural systems for plant and animal diversity gradient studies for over 250 years. In the recent decade, the exploration of microorganisms on mountainsides has also achieved substantial progress. Here, we review the literature on microbial diversity across taxonomic groups and ecosystem types on global mountains. Microbial community shows climatic zonation with orderly successions along elevational gradients, which are largely consistent with traditional climatic hypotheses. However, elevational patterns are complicated for species richness without general rules in terrestrial and aquatic environments and are driven mainly by deterministic processes caused by abiotic and biotic factors. We see a major shift from documenting patterns of biodiversity towards identifying the mechanisms that shape microbial biogeographical patterns and how these patterns vary under global change by the inclusion of novel ecological theories, frameworks and approaches. We thus propose key questions and cutting-edge perspectives to advance future research in mountain microbial biogeography by focusing on biodiversity hypotheses, incorporating meta-ecosystem framework and novel key drivers, adapting recently developed approaches in trait-based ecology and manipulative field experiments, disentangling biodiversity-ecosystem functioning relationships and finally modelling and predicting their global change responses.

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