{"title":"微生物循环土壤养分","authors":"P. Hirsch","doi":"10.1201/9780429059186-11","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"Microorganisms drive nutrient cycles in soil, and without this key activity, many essential elements would not be available to plants. Conversely, without the input of carbon and energy, primarily from photosynthesis by green plants, soil would consist mainly of mineral particles produced by the weathering of rocks. Residues from plant, animal, and microbial activity provide organic components, making soils fertile and binding together mineral particles into aggregates that, with the associated pore spaces, confer structure to the matrix that supports terrestrial life. In addition to providing a substrate for plants, soil also hosts a complex food web of microorganisms, microfauna,and mesofauna. Soils host large and diverse microbial communities, which comprise an estimated 109 bacterial and archaeal cells per gram belonging to 104–106 operational taxonomic units (OTUs) per gram in temperate soils. Fungal biomass, as estimated from phospholipid fatty acid biomarkers, is often, but not always, <4% of the bacterial biomass. This is even lower when calculated on the basis of protein or RNA biomarkers, with correspondingly fewer OTUs detected (Dassen et al. 2017). As outlined in Chapter 1, the microscale physicochemical variability of soil creates multiple microenvironments that are at the basis of the multitude of niches required to host this high diversity. The soil microbiome is involved in many nutrient transformations, cycling essential elements between abiotic and \nbiotic pools. The spatial separation of microsites enables parallel evolution of multiple lineages in any soil. In general, microbial transformations of nutrients can be divided into those that are undertaken by many diverse organisms (categorized as “broad” processes) and those that are more specific or “narrow,” performed by defined groups of specialists (Schimel and Schaeffer 2012).","PeriodicalId":398120,"journal":{"name":"Modern Soil Microbiology","volume":"1 1","pages":"0"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"1900-01-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"2","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Microorganisms Cycling Soil Nutrients\",\"authors\":\"P. Hirsch\",\"doi\":\"10.1201/9780429059186-11\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"Microorganisms drive nutrient cycles in soil, and without this key activity, many essential elements would not be available to plants. Conversely, without the input of carbon and energy, primarily from photosynthesis by green plants, soil would consist mainly of mineral particles produced by the weathering of rocks. Residues from plant, animal, and microbial activity provide organic components, making soils fertile and binding together mineral particles into aggregates that, with the associated pore spaces, confer structure to the matrix that supports terrestrial life. In addition to providing a substrate for plants, soil also hosts a complex food web of microorganisms, microfauna,and mesofauna. Soils host large and diverse microbial communities, which comprise an estimated 109 bacterial and archaeal cells per gram belonging to 104–106 operational taxonomic units (OTUs) per gram in temperate soils. Fungal biomass, as estimated from phospholipid fatty acid biomarkers, is often, but not always, <4% of the bacterial biomass. This is even lower when calculated on the basis of protein or RNA biomarkers, with correspondingly fewer OTUs detected (Dassen et al. 2017). As outlined in Chapter 1, the microscale physicochemical variability of soil creates multiple microenvironments that are at the basis of the multitude of niches required to host this high diversity. The soil microbiome is involved in many nutrient transformations, cycling essential elements between abiotic and \\nbiotic pools. The spatial separation of microsites enables parallel evolution of multiple lineages in any soil. 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引用次数: 2
摘要
微生物驱动土壤中的养分循环,如果没有这一关键活动,植物就无法获得许多必需元素。相反,如果没有主要来自绿色植物光合作用的碳和能量的输入,土壤将主要由岩石风化产生的矿物颗粒组成。植物、动物和微生物活动的残留物提供了有机成分,使土壤肥沃,并将矿物颗粒结合在一起形成聚集体,这些聚集体带有相关的孔隙空间,赋予支撑陆地生命的基质结构。除了为植物提供基质外,土壤还承载着由微生物、微型动物和中型动物组成的复杂食物网。在温带土壤中,每克土壤中估计有109个细菌和古细菌细胞,属于104-106个操作分类单位(otu)。根据磷脂脂肪酸生物标志物估计,真菌生物量通常(但不总是)低于细菌生物量的4%。当以蛋白质或RNA生物标志物为基础计算时,这一数字甚至更低,检测到的otu相应更少(Dassen et al. 2017)。如第1章所述,土壤的微尺度物理化学变异性创造了多个微环境,这些微环境是承载这种高度多样性所需的众多生态位的基础。土壤微生物群参与了许多养分转化,在非生物和生物池之间循环必需元素。微位点的空间分离使多种谱系在任何土壤中平行进化成为可能。一般来说,营养物质的微生物转化可以分为由许多不同的生物进行的转化(归类为“广泛”过程)和那些更具体或“狭隘”的转化,由确定的专家小组进行(Schimel和Schaeffer 2012)。
Microorganisms drive nutrient cycles in soil, and without this key activity, many essential elements would not be available to plants. Conversely, without the input of carbon and energy, primarily from photosynthesis by green plants, soil would consist mainly of mineral particles produced by the weathering of rocks. Residues from plant, animal, and microbial activity provide organic components, making soils fertile and binding together mineral particles into aggregates that, with the associated pore spaces, confer structure to the matrix that supports terrestrial life. In addition to providing a substrate for plants, soil also hosts a complex food web of microorganisms, microfauna,and mesofauna. Soils host large and diverse microbial communities, which comprise an estimated 109 bacterial and archaeal cells per gram belonging to 104–106 operational taxonomic units (OTUs) per gram in temperate soils. Fungal biomass, as estimated from phospholipid fatty acid biomarkers, is often, but not always, <4% of the bacterial biomass. This is even lower when calculated on the basis of protein or RNA biomarkers, with correspondingly fewer OTUs detected (Dassen et al. 2017). As outlined in Chapter 1, the microscale physicochemical variability of soil creates multiple microenvironments that are at the basis of the multitude of niches required to host this high diversity. The soil microbiome is involved in many nutrient transformations, cycling essential elements between abiotic and
biotic pools. The spatial separation of microsites enables parallel evolution of multiple lineages in any soil. In general, microbial transformations of nutrients can be divided into those that are undertaken by many diverse organisms (categorized as “broad” processes) and those that are more specific or “narrow,” performed by defined groups of specialists (Schimel and Schaeffer 2012).