# Seasonal shifts in vegetation, soil properties, and microbial communities in Western Himalayan forests

**Authors:** Huma Ali, Muhammad Rafiq, Muhammad Manzoor, Syed Waseem Gillani, Allan Degen, Awais Iqbal, Wenyin Wang, Muhammad Khalid Rafiq, Zhanhuan Shang

PMC · DOI: 10.1186/s40793-025-00842-y · 2026-01-06

## TL;DR

This study shows how Western Himalayan forests change seasonally, with summer bringing more biodiversity and dynamic soil-microbe interactions, while winter offers stability.

## Contribution

The study reveals seasonal dynamics in high-altitude forests, linking vegetation, soil properties, and microbial communities with functional redundancy in microbes.

## Key findings

- Plant and microbial diversity indices were higher in summer, while community maturity was higher in winter.
- Soil properties like pH and phosphorus were higher in summer, while moisture and organic carbon were higher in winter.
- Microbial functional redundancy maintained core processes despite seasonal taxonomic shifts.

## Abstract

The western Himalayan forest ecosystem faces escalating pressures from climate change and anthropogenic activities, demanding improved conservation strategies. Effective management requires understanding the seasonal fluctuations in vegetation, soil properties and microbial communities, but they remain poorly characterized across high altitude forests. We assessed these variables in 10 forest sites during the winter of 2023 and summer of 2024, analysing vegetation diversity, soil parameters, and microbial metagenomics.

We found pronounced seasonal shifts in plant and microbial diversities, and in soil properties. Plant species richness, and Shannon and Simpson diversity indices were higher (p < 0.001) in summer than in winter while the community maturity index was higher (p < 0.02) in winter than in summer. Soil properties exhibited clear seasonal patterns: pH, available phosphorus (AP), microbial biomass carbon (MBC) and cation exchange capacity (CEC) were higher (p < 0.05) in summer, whereas soil moisture (SM) and soil organic carbon (SOC) were higher (p < 0.05) in winter. Microbial alpha diversity indices (Shannon, Chao, and Sobs) were elevated (p < 0.05) in summer, while the Simpson index was elevated in winter, indicating a shift in community dominance. Beta diversity analyses revealed a significant seasonal shift in overall metabolic potential (KEGG orthologs; ANOSIM R = 0.222, p = 0.016), but not in general protein functions (COG), carbohydrate-active enzymes (CAZy), or taxonomic composition (RefSeq). Therefore, despite taxonomic turnover, core metabolic functions were maintained, indicating strong functional redundancy. Structural equation models (SEM) confirmed distinct seasonal dynamics, revealing stronger plant-soil-microbe interactions and a greater proportion of variance explained by the model in summer (R2=0.64–0.72 for key paths) than in winter (R2=0.52–0.63).

The findings demonstrate that the western Himalayan ecosystem undergoes a fundamental seasonal reorganization. Summer is characterized by increased biodiversity, distinct soil conditions, and more dynamic microbial-ecosystem interactions, while winter exhibits greater community maturity and functional stability. The resilience of core ecosystem processes is underpinned by microbial functional redundancy, which ensures metabolic continuity despite taxonomic shifts. We recommend that forest management strategies account for these seasonal dynamics and focus on preserving the conditions that support this critical functional redundancy.

The online version contains supplementary material available at 10.1186/s40793-025-00842-y.

## Full-text entities

- **Chemicals:** carbohydrate (MESH:D002241), AP (-), carbon (MESH:D002244), phosphorus (MESH:D010758)

## Figures

9 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12871016/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12871016