| Literature DB >> 26647180 |
Fernando T Maestre1, Manuel Delgado-Baquerizo2, Thomas C Jeffries2, David J Eldridge3, Victoria Ochoa4, Beatriz Gozalo4, José Luis Quero5, Miguel García-Gómez6, Antonio Gallardo7, Werner Ulrich8, Matthew A Bowker9, Tulio Arredondo10, Claudia Barraza-Zepeda11, Donaldo Bran12, Adriana Florentino13, Juan Gaitán14, Julio R Gutiérrez15, Elisabeth Huber-Sannwald10, Mohammad Jankju16, Rebecca L Mau17, Maria Miriti18, Kamal Naseri16, Abelardo Ospina13, Ilan Stavi19, Deli Wang20, Natasha N Woods18, Xia Yuan20, Eli Zaady21, Brajesh K Singh22.
Abstract
Soil bacteria and fungi play key roles in the functioning of terrestrial ecosystems, yet our understanding of their responses to climate change lags significantly behind that of other organisms. This gap in our understanding is particularly true for drylands, which occupy ∼41% of Earth´s surface, because no global, systematic assessments of the joint diversity of soil bacteria and fungi have been conducted in these environments to date. Here we present results from a study conducted across 80 dryland sites from all continents, except Antarctica, to assess how changes in aridity affect the composition, abundance, and diversity of soil bacteria and fungi. The diversity and abundance of soil bacteria and fungi was reduced as aridity increased. These results were largely driven by the negative impacts of aridity on soil organic carbon content, which positively affected the abundance and diversity of both bacteria and fungi. Aridity promoted shifts in the composition of soil bacteria, with increases in the relative abundance of Chloroflexi and α-Proteobacteria and decreases in Acidobacteria and Verrucomicrobia. Contrary to what has been reported by previous continental and global-scale studies, soil pH was not a major driver of bacterial diversity, and fungal communities were dominated by Ascomycota. Our results fill a critical gap in our understanding of soil microbial communities in terrestrial ecosystems. They suggest that changes in aridity, such as those predicted by climate-change models, may reduce microbial abundance and diversity, a response that will likely impact the provision of key ecosystem services by global drylands.Entities:
Keywords: arid; bacteria; climate change; fungi; semiarid
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26647180 PMCID: PMC4697385 DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1516684112
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ISSN: 0027-8424 Impact factor: 11.205