Microbial community dynamics in soil depth profiles over 120,000 years of ecosystem development

Download statistics - Document (COUNTER):

Turner, S.; Mikutta, R.; Meyer-Stüve, S.; Guggenberger, G.; Schaarschmidt, F. et al.: Microbial community dynamics in soil depth profiles over 120,000 years of ecosystem development. In: Frontiers in Microbiology 8 (2017), 874. DOI: https://doi.org/10.3389/fmicb.2017.00874

Repository version

To cite the version in the repository, please use this identifier: https://doi.org/10.15488/1726

Selected time period:

year: 
month: 

Sum total of downloads: 258




Thumbnail
Abstract: 
Along a long-term ecosystem development gradient, soil nutrient contents and mineralogical properties change, therefore probably altering soil microbial communities. However, knowledge about the dynamics of soil microbial communities during long-term ecosystem development including progressive and retrogressive stages is limited, especially in mineral soils. Therefore, microbial abundances (quantitative PCR) and community composition (pyrosequencing) as well as their controlling soil properties were investigated in soil depth profiles along the 120,000 years old Franz Josef chronosequence (New Zealand). Additionally, in a microcosm incubation experiment the effects of particular soil properties, i.e., soil age, soil organic matter fraction (mineral-associated vs. particulate), O2 status, and carbon and phosphorus additions, on microbial abundances (quantitative PCR) and community patterns (T-RFLP) were analyzed. The archaeal to bacterial abundance ratio not only increased with soil depth but also with soil age along the chronosequence, coinciding with mineralogical changes and increasing phosphorus limitation. Results of the incubation experiment indicated that archaeal abundances were less impacted by the tested soil parameters compared to Bacteria suggesting that Archaea may better cope with mineral-induced substrate restrictions in subsoils and older soils. Instead, archaeal communities showed a soil age-related compositional shift with the Bathyarchaeota, that were frequently detected in nutrient-poor, low-energy environments, being dominant at the oldest site. However, bacterial communities remained stable with ongoing soil development. In contrast to the abundances, the archaeal compositional shift was associated with the mineralogical gradient. Our study revealed, that archaeal and bacterial communities in whole soil profiles are differently affected by long-term soil development with archaeal communities probably being better adapted to subsoil conditions, especially in nutrient-depleted old soils.
License of this version: CC BY 4.0 Unported
Document Type: Article
Publishing status: publishedVersion
Issue Date: 2017
Appears in Collections:Naturwissenschaftliche Fakultät

distribution of downloads over the selected time period:

downloads by country:

pos. country downloads
total perc.
1 image of flag of Germany Germany 209 81.01%
2 image of flag of United States United States 23 8.91%
3 image of flag of China China 8 3.10%
4 image of flag of No geo information available No geo information available 2 0.78%
5 image of flag of Russian Federation Russian Federation 2 0.78%
6 image of flag of India India 2 0.78%
7 image of flag of France France 2 0.78%
8 image of flag of Czech Republic Czech Republic 2 0.78%
9 image of flag of Peru Peru 1 0.39%
10 image of flag of Canada Canada 1 0.39%
    other countries 6 2.33%

Further download figures and rankings:


Hinweis

Zur Erhebung der Downloadstatistiken kommen entsprechend dem „COUNTER Code of Practice for e-Resources“ international anerkannte Regeln und Normen zur Anwendung. COUNTER ist eine internationale Non-Profit-Organisation, in der Bibliotheksverbände, Datenbankanbieter und Verlage gemeinsam an Standards zur Erhebung, Speicherung und Verarbeitung von Nutzungsdaten elektronischer Ressourcen arbeiten, welche so Objektivität und Vergleichbarkeit gewährleisten sollen. Es werden hierbei ausschließlich Zugriffe auf die entsprechenden Volltexte ausgewertet, keine Aufrufe der Website an sich.

Search the repository


Browse