Abstract Mangrove roots harbor a repertoire of microbial taxa that contribute to important ecological functions in mangrove ecosystems. However, the diversity, function, and assembly of mangrove root-associated microbial communities along a continuous fine-scale niche remain elusive. Here, we applied amplicon and metagenome sequencing to investigate the bacterial and fungal communities among four compartments (nonrhizosphere, rhizosphere, episphere, and endosphere) of mangrove roots. We found different distribution patterns for both bacterial and fungal communities in all four root compartments, which could be largely due to niche differentiation along the root compartments and exudation effects of mangrove roots. The functional pattern for bacterial and fungal communities was also divergent within the compartments. The endosphere harbored more genes involved in carbohydrate metabolism, lipid transport, and methane production, and fewer genes were found to be involved in sulfur reduction compared to other compartments. The dynamics of root-associated microbial communities revealed that 56–74% of endosphere bacterial taxa were derived from nonrhizosphere, whereas no fungal OTUs of nonrhizosphere were detected in the endosphere. This indicates that roots may play a more strictly selective role in the assembly of the fungal community compared to the endosphere bacterial community, which is consistent with the projections established in an amplification-selection model. This study reveals the divergence in the diversity and function of root-associated microbial communities along a continuous fine-scale niche, thereby highlighting a strictly selective role of soil-root interfaces in shaping the fungal community structure in the mangrove root systems.
Abstract Background Nitrogen-fixing prokaryotes (diazotrophs) contribute substantially to nitrogen input in mangrove sediments, and their structure and nitrogen fixation rate (NFR) are significantly controlled by environmental conditions. Despite the well-known studies on diazotrophs in surficial sediments, the diversity, structure, and ecological functions of diazotrophic communities along environmental gradients of mangrove sediment across different depths are largely unknown. Here, we investigated how biological nitrogen fixation varied with the depth of mangrove sediments from the perspectives of both NFR and diazotrophic communities. Results Through acetylene reduction assay, nifH gene amplicon and metagenomic sequencing, we found that the NFR increased but the diversity of diazotrophic communities decreased with the depth of mangrove sediments. The structure of diazotrophic communities at different depths was largely driven by salinity and exhibited a clear divergence at the partitioning depth of 50 cm. Among diazotrophic genera correlated with NFR, Agrobacterium and Azotobacter were specifically enriched at 50–100 cm sediments, while Anaeromyxobacter , Rubrivivax , Methylocystis , Dickeya , and Methylomonas were more abundant at 0–50 cm. Consistent with the higher NFR, metagenomic analysis demonstrated the elevated abundance of nitrogen fixation genes ( nifH/D/K ) in deep sediments, where nitrification genes ( amoA/B/C ) and denitrification genes ( nirK and norB ) became less abundant. Three metagenome-assembled genomes (MAGs) of diazotrophs from deep mangrove sediments indicated their facultatively anaerobic and mixotrophic lifestyles as they contained genes for low-oxygen-dependent metabolism, hydrogenotrophic respiration, carbon fixation, and pyruvate fermentation. Conclusions This study demonstrates the depth-dependent variability of biological nitrogen fixation in terms of NFR and diazotrophic communities, which to a certain extent relieves the degree of nitrogen limitation in deep mangrove sediments.