Leveraging Fine-Scale Variation and Heterogeneity of the Wetland Soil Microbiome to Predict Nutrient Flux on the Landscape.

IF 3.3 3区 生物学 Q2 ECOLOGY
N Reed Alexander, Robert S Brown, Shrijana Duwadi, Spencer G Womble, David W Ludwig, Kylie C Moe, Justin N Murdock, Joshua L Phillips, Allison M Veach, Donald M Walker
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Shifts in agricultural land use over the past 200 years have led to a loss of nearly 50% of existing wetlands in the USA, and agricultural activities contribute up to 65% of the nutrients that reach the Mississippi River Basin, directly contributing to biological disasters such as the hypoxic Gulf of Mexico "Dead" Zone. Federal efforts to construct and restore wetland habitats have been employed to mitigate the detrimental effects of eutrophication, with an emphasis on the restoration of ecosystem services such as nutrient cycling and retention. Soil microbial assemblages drive biogeochemical cycles and offer a unique and sensitive framework for the accurate evaluation, restoration, and management of ecosystem services. The purpose of this study was to elucidate patterns of soil bacteria within and among wetlands by developing diversity profiles from high-throughput sequencing data, link functional gene copy number of nitrogen cycling genes to measured nutrient flux rates collected from flow-through incubation cores, and predict nutrient flux using microbial assemblage composition. Soil microbial assemblages showed fine-scale turnover in soil cores collected across the topsoil horizon (0-5 cm; top vs bottom partitions) and were structured by restoration practices on the easements (tree planting, shallow water, remnant forest). Connections between soil assemblage composition, functional gene copy number, and nutrient flux rates show the potential for soil bacterial assemblages to be used as bioindicators for nutrient cycling on the landscape. In addition, the predictive accuracy of flux rates was improved when implementing deep learning models that paired connected samples across time.

利用湿地土壤微生物群落的细微尺度变化和异质性预测景观上的养分通量。
在过去的200年里,农业用地利用的变化导致美国现有湿地损失了近50%,农业活动贡献了高达65%的营养物质,这些营养物质到达密西西比河流域,直接导致了生物灾害,如缺氧的墨西哥湾“死亡地带”。联邦政府建设和恢复湿地生境的努力已被用来减轻富营养化的有害影响,重点是恢复生态系统服务,如养分循环和保留。土壤微生物组合驱动生物地球化学循环,为生态系统服务的准确评估、恢复和管理提供了独特而敏感的框架。本研究的目的是通过高通量测序数据建立多样性图谱,阐明湿地内和湿地间土壤细菌的模式,将氮循环基因的功能基因拷贝数与从孵育核心中收集的测量的养分通量联系起来,并利用微生物组合组成预测养分通量。土壤微生物组合在表层土层(0-5 cm;顶部和底部分区),并通过地役权的恢复实践(植树、浅水、残余森林)来构建。土壤细菌组合组成、功能基因拷贝数和养分通量之间的联系表明,土壤细菌组合有可能被用作景观养分循环的生物指标。此外,在实现跨时间配对连接样本的深度学习模型时,通量率的预测准确性得到了提高。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Microbial Ecology
Microbial Ecology 生物-海洋与淡水生物学
CiteScore
6.90
自引率
2.80%
发文量
212
审稿时长
3-8 weeks
期刊介绍: The journal Microbial Ecology was founded more than 50 years ago by Dr. Ralph Mitchell, Gordon McKay Professor of Applied Biology at Harvard University in Cambridge, MA. The journal has evolved to become a premier location for the presentation of manuscripts that represent advances in the field of microbial ecology. The journal has become a dedicated international forum for the presentation of high-quality scientific investigations of how microorganisms interact with their environment, with each other and with their hosts. Microbial Ecology offers articles of original research in full paper and note formats, as well as brief reviews and topical position papers.
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