# Relative Contributions of Soil and Litter Properties to Soil Microbial Community Variations During the Restoration of Larch Plantations to Mixed Forests

**Authors:** Zilu Wang, Yiping Lin, Kefan Wang, Xin Fang, Nuo Li, Cong Shi, Fuchen Shi

PMC · DOI: 10.3390/microorganisms13102359 · Microorganisms · 2025-10-14

## TL;DR

This study examines how soil and litter properties influence soil microbial communities during the restoration of larch plantations to mixed forests.

## Contribution

The study identifies soil available phosphorus and total nitrogen as key factors influencing microbial community variation during forest restoration.

## Key findings

- Bacterial and fungal α-diversity varied significantly in subsoil across restoration stages.
- Fungal communities were more sensitive to restoration and closely linked to litter properties.
- Soil properties explained 41% of bacterial and 28% of fungal community variation.

## Abstract

The ecological restoration process of larch plantations to mixed forests contributes to enhancing the stability and functionality of forest ecosystems, with soil microbes playing a crucial role in this process. To elucidate the changes in soil microbial communities during this transition and their relationships with soil and litter properties, the study used 16S/ITS rRNA high-throughput sequencing to investigate the diversity and composition of soil bacterial and fungal communities at two soil depths across four restoration stages, and further quantified the relative contributions of soil and litter properties to variations in microbial community structure. The results indicated that bacterial and fungal α-diversity remained relatively stable in the topsoil but varied significantly across restoration stages in the subsoil (p<0.05), with the highest levels observed during the broadleaf species invasion stage. Fungal community structure demonstrated greater sensitivity to the restoration process, whereas bacterial communities showed stronger spatial dependency. Variance partitioning analysis revealed that soil properties were the main contributors to the variations of bacterial and fungal communities, accounting for 41% and 28% of the total variance, respectively. Fungal communities were more closely associated with litter properties than bacterial communities. Redundancy analysis combined with hierarchical partitioning further revealed that soil available phosphorus (AP) and total nitrogen (TN) were key factors explaining the variation in both bacterial and fungal communities. Additionally, litter total nitrogen (LTN) also emerged as an important factor affecting soil fungal communities. These findings provide critical microbiological evidence for accelerating the forest restoration in Northeast China through soil fertility management and regulation of litter inputs.

## Full-text entities

- **Chemicals:** nitrogen (MESH:D009584), AP (-), phosphorus (MESH:D010758)

## Full text

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## Figures

10 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12565900/full.md

## References

77 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12565900/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12565900