排水梯度与季节周期:微生物群落组成对土壤水分变化的不同反应

Christopher J. Burgess, David D. Myrold, Ryan S. Mueller, Thomas Wanzek, Jennifer M. Moore, Kristin D. Kasschau, Markus Kleber
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摘要

在三个相邻的、跨越排水梯度的莫里索土壤中,对土壤微生物群落组成随时间的变化进行了为期一年的月度评估。这样做是为了区分群落组成的自然波动与对土壤水分供应等环境因素的持久适应。为了将土壤水分可用性作为一个控制因素,我们选择了三种土壤,它们具有相同的土阶(细粉土、超活性阿基克塞罗尔/阿基阿尔伯尔)、坡度(0%-1%)、温度机制(中温)、湿度机制(干旱)和土地使用历史(过去 10 年连续使用草地),但排水等级不同(排水良好与排水适中与排水不良)。通过对细菌群落进行为期一年的每月监测,量化了微生物多样性的变化。在不同的土壤中,α-多样性随季节和排水等级的变化不大。尽管这三种土壤的气候条件和植被/土地利用情况相同,但它们的群落组成和更替情况却截然不同,我们将其归因于不同排水系统和季节的水分供应差异。我们认为,排水不良土壤中季节性水分饱和引起的土壤氧化还原电位季节性反复下降,是造成该土壤微生物群落与排水较好土壤微生物群落截然不同的最可能原因。我们的调查表明,并非所有微生物多样性指标都对季节性和与排水相关的土壤水分变化具有相同的敏感性。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Drainage gradient versus seasonal cycles: Differential response of microbial community composition to variations in soil moisture

The variation in the soil microbial community composition over time was assessed at monthly time steps for 1 year in three neighboring Mollisols spanning a drainage gradient. This was done to distinguish between natural oscillations in the community composition versus lasting adaptations to environmental factors such as soil water availability. To isolate soil water availability as a controlling factor, we selected three soils sharing the same soil order (fine-silty, superactive Argixerolls/Argialbolls); slope (0%–1%); temperature regime (mesic); moisture regime (xeric); and land use history (continuous grassland for the past 10 years) but differing in drainage class (well-drained vs. moderately well-drained vs. poorly drained). Changes in microbial diversity were quantified by monitoring the bacterial community at monthly intervals for 1 year. Within individual soils, α-diversity varied little with season and drainage classes. Despite the three soils experiencing the same climate regime and vegetation/land use, they exhibited distinct community composition and turnover, which we attribute to differences in moisture availability across drainage and seasons. We posit that a seasonal recurring drop in soil redox potential induced by seasonal water saturation in the poorly drained soil is the most probable cause setting the microbial community of that soil apart from those in the better drained soils. Our investigation suggests that not all indicators of microbial diversity share the same sensitivity to seasonal and drainage-related soil moisture variations.

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