Literature DB >> 24335828

Distinct microbial communities associated with buried soils in the Siberian tundra.

Antje Gittel1, Jiří Bárta2, Iva Kohoutová2, Robert Mikutta3, Sarah Owens4, Jack Gilbert5, Jörg Schnecker6, Birgit Wild6, Bjarte Hannisdal7, Joeran Maerz8, Nikolay Lashchinskiy9, Petr Capek2, Hana Santrůčková2, Norman Gentsch3, Olga Shibistova10, Georg Guggenberger3, Andreas Richter6, Vigdis L Torsvik11, Christa Schleper12, Tim Urich13.   

Abstract

Cryoturbation, the burial of topsoil material into deeper soil horizons by repeated freeze-thaw events, is an important storage mechanism for soil organic matter (SOM) in permafrost-affected soils. Besides abiotic conditions, microbial community structure and the accessibility of SOM to the decomposer community are hypothesized to control SOM decomposition and thus have a crucial role in SOM accumulation in buried soils. We surveyed the microbial community structure in cryoturbated soils from nine soil profiles in the northeastern Siberian tundra using high-throughput sequencing and quantification of bacterial, archaeal and fungal marker genes. We found that bacterial abundances in buried topsoils were as high as in unburied topsoils. In contrast, fungal abundances decreased with depth and were significantly lower in buried than in unburied topsoils resulting in remarkably low fungal to bacterial ratios in buried topsoils. Fungal community profiling revealed an associated decrease in presumably ectomycorrhizal (ECM) fungi. The abiotic conditions (low to subzero temperatures, anoxia) and the reduced abundance of fungi likely provide a niche for bacterial, facultative anaerobic decomposers of SOM such as members of the Actinobacteria, which were found in significantly higher relative abundances in buried than in unburied topsoils. Our study expands the knowledge on the microbial community structure in soils of Northern latitude permafrost regions, and attributes the delayed decomposition of SOM in buried soils to specific microbial taxa, and particularly to a decrease in abundance and activity of ECM fungi, and to the extent to which bacterial decomposers are able to act as their functional substitutes.

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Year:  2013        PMID: 24335828      PMCID: PMC3960545          DOI: 10.1038/ismej.2013.219

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  ISME J        ISSN: 1751-7362            Impact factor:   10.302


  37 in total

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Review 3.  Evolution and Ecology of Actinobacteria and Their Bioenergy Applications.

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9.  Soil microbial legacies differ following drying-rewetting and freezing-thawing cycles.

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10.  Microbial community composition shapes enzyme patterns in topsoil and subsoil horizons along a latitudinal transect in Western Siberia.

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