Literature DB >> 26274049

Long-term effects of timber harvesting on hemicellulolytic microbial populations in coniferous forest soils.

Hilary T C Leung1, Kendra R Maas1, Roland C Wilhelm1, William W Mohn1.   

Abstract

Forest ecosystems need to be sustainably managed, as they are major reservoirs of biodiversity, provide important economic resources and modulate global climate. We have a poor knowledge of populations responsible for key biomass degradation processes in forest soils and the effects of forest harvesting on these populations. Here, we investigated the effects of three timber-harvesting methods, varying in the degree of organic matter removal, on putatively hemicellulolytic bacterial and fungal populations 10 or more years after harvesting and replanting. We used stable-isotope probing to identify populations that incorporated (13)C from labeled hemicellulose, analyzing (13)C-enriched phospholipid fatty acids, bacterial 16 S rRNA genes and fungal ITS regions. In soil microcosms, we identified 104 bacterial and 52 fungal hemicellulolytic operational taxonomic units (OTUs). Several of these OTUs are affiliated with taxa not previously reported to degrade hemicellulose, including the bacterial genera Methylibium, Pelomonas and Rhodoferax, and the fungal genera Cladosporium, Pseudeurotiaceae, Capronia, Xenopolyscytalum and Venturia. The effect of harvesting on hemicellulolytic populations was evaluated based on in situ bacterial and fungal OTUs. Harvesting treatments had significant but modest long-term effects on relative abundances of hemicellulolytic populations, which differed in strength between two ecozones and between soil layers. For soils incubated in microcosms, prior harvesting treatments did not affect the rate of incorporation of hemicellulose carbon into microbial biomass. In six ecozones across North America, distributions of the bacterial hemicellulolytic OTUs were similar, whereas distributions of fungal ones differed. Our work demonstrates that diverse taxa in soil are hemicellulolytic, many of which are differentially affected by the impact of harvesting on environmental conditions. However, the hemicellulolytic capacity of soil communities appears resilient.

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Year:  2015        PMID: 26274049      PMCID: PMC4737928          DOI: 10.1038/ismej.2015.118

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


  42 in total

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  11 in total

1.  Biogeography and organic matter removal shape long-term effects of timber harvesting on forest soil microbial communities.

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2.  A metagenomic survey of forest soil microbial communities more than a decade after timber harvesting.

Authors:  Roland C Wilhelm; Erick Cardenas; Hilary Leung; Kendra Maas; Martin Hartmann; Aria Hahn; Steven Hallam; William W Mohn
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3.  Long-Term Enrichment of Stress-Tolerant Cellulolytic Soil Populations following Timber Harvesting Evidenced by Multi-Omic Stable Isotope Probing.

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9.  Effects of timber harvesting on the genetic potential for carbon and nitrogen cycling in five North American forest ecozones.

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10.  Bacterial contributions to delignification and lignocellulose degradation in forest soils with metagenomic and quantitative stable isotope probing.

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Journal:  ISME J       Date:  2018-09-26       Impact factor: 10.302

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