Microbial communities are the fundamental determinants of Nongxiang Daqu quality. In this study, we systematically investigated the assembly and succession mechanisms of microbial communities during Nongxiang Daqu fermentation. Our findings reveal that this ecological succession is primarily driven by deterministic processes, encompassing dynamic environmental variables and interspecific microbial interactions. Significant stage-specific temporal variations in the community structure were observed, and biomarkers identified via a random forest model further corroborated these dynamic successional patterns. Both the neutral community model and Modified Stochasticity Ratio (MST) tests demonstrated that community assembly is dominated by deterministic processes, the influence of which intensifies as fermentation progresses. Notably, the fungal community exhibited a more pronounced response to these deterministic environmental selections than the bacterial community. Furthermore, co-occurrence network analysis, Mantel tests, and redundancy analysis (RDA) collectively illustrated that microbial interactions and environmental factors—specifically temperature, humidity, oxygen, carbon dioxide, and acidity—synergistically regulate this succession. Crucially, the rates of change in these environmental parameters directly dictated the pace of microbial turnover. Among these, oxygen and acidity had the greatest influence: oxygen accounted for 17.32% and 29.05% of the effects on fungi and bacteria, respectively, while acidity accounted for 16.77% and 25.23%, respectively. Time-series forecasting indicated that community structural assembly and stabilization predominantly conclude within the initial 30 days of fermentation. Ultimately, this study uncovers the ecological driving forces shaping the Nongxiang Daqu microbiome, providing a vital theoretical foundation for the targeted regulation of Daqu microecology and the enhancement of product quality.
Wang et al. (Fri,) studied this question.