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Chinese Journal of Ecology ›› 2025, Vol. 44 ›› Issue (3): 869-874.doi: 10.13292/j.1000-4890.202503.028

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Effects of forest types on nitrogen-fixing gene abundance in soil aggregates from a subtropical forest.

HAN Fengyi1,2, DENG Milin1,2, WAN Song1,2, XU Chao2,4, YE Guiping3, HE Jizheng1,2, LIN Yongxin1,2*   

  1. (1Cultivation Base of State Key Laboratory for Subtropical Mountain Ecology, Fuzhou 350007, China; 2School of Geographical Sciences, Fujian Normal University, Fuzhou 350007, China 3College of Geography and Oceanography, Minjiang University, Fuzhou 350108, China; 4Fujian Sanming Forest Ecosystem and Global Change National Observation and Research Station, Sanming 365000, Fujian, China).

  • Online:2025-03-10 Published:2025-06-10

Abstract:

With the increasing demands for wood resources under the social development, large areas of natural forests in China have been transformed into secondary forests or plantations. Different forest types can have profound effects on ecosystem structure and function. We examined the responses of the abundance of nifH genes in soils and aggregates to forest types, including Cunninghamia lanceolata plantation and Pinus massoniana plantation formed by reforestation after clearcutting of natural Castanopsis carlesii forest, as well as secondary C. carlesii forest formed after selective logging. Results showed that soil available phosphorus (AP) and soil moisture contents in both plantations were higher than those in the secondary forest. P. massoniana plantation had significantly higher AP content than the secondary forest and C. lanceolata plantation. The abundance of nifH genes (4.26×109 copies·g-1) in P massoniana plantation was significantly higher than that in secondary forest (2.16×109 copies·g-1) and C. lanceolata plantation (3.07×109 copies·g-1). The abundance of nifH genes was significantly and positively correlated with AP and moisture contents in bulk soils. Moreover, aggregate sizes had a significant effect on the abundance of the nifH genes, with the lowest abundance in silt-clay particles and the highest in small macroaggregates in all forest types. The abundance of nifH genes in different sizes of aggregates from the P. massoniana plantation was generally higher than that from the secondary forest and C. lanceolata plantation. Overall, both forest types and soil aggregate sizes significantly influenced the abundance of nifH genes in subtropical forests, with AP and moisture contents as the critical driving factors.


Key words: mycorrhizae, forest type, nifH gene, soil aggregate