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Environmental factors affect acidobacterial communities below the subgroup level in Grassland and Forest Soils

Authors :
Gertrud Lohaus
Elisabeth K. V. Kalko
Jan Weinert
Verena Naegele
Ingo Schöning
Bärbel U. Foesel
Wolfgang W. Weisser
Michael W. Friedrich
Pia K. Wüst
Andreas Hemp
Sonja Gockel
Swen C. Renner
Fabian Alt
Jörg Overmann
Andrea Polle
Markus Fischer
Michael Bonkowski
Simone Pfeiffer
Konstans Wells
Astrid Naether
Karl Eduard Linsenmair
Yvonne Oelmann
Source :
Applied and Environmental Microbiology
Publication Year :
2012

Abstract

In soil, Acidobacteria constitute on average 20% of all bacteria, are highly diverse, and are physiologically active in situ . However, their individual functions and interactions with higher taxa in soil are still unknown. Here, potential effects of land use, soil properties, plant diversity, and soil nanofauna on acidobacterial community composition were studied by cultivation-independent methods in grassland and forest soils from three different regions in Germany. The analysis of 16S rRNA gene clone libraries representing all studied soils revealed that grassland soils were dominated by subgroup Gp6 and forest soils by subgroup Gp1 Acidobacteria . The analysis of a large number of sites ( n = 57) by 16S rRNA gene fingerprinting methods (terminal restriction fragment length polymorphism [T-RFLP] and denaturing gradient gel electrophoresis [DGGE]) showed that Acidobacteria diversities differed between grassland and forest soils but also among the three different regions. Edaphic properties, such as pH, organic carbon, total nitrogen, C/N ratio, phosphorus, nitrate, ammonium, soil moisture, soil temperature, and soil respiration, had an impact on community composition as assessed by fingerprinting. However, interrelations with environmental parameters among subgroup terminal restriction fragments (T-RFs) differed significantly, e.g., different Gp1 T-RFs correlated positively or negatively with nitrogen content. Novel significant correlations of Acidobacteria subpopulations (i.e., individual populations within subgroups) with soil nanofauna and vascular plant diversity were revealed only by analysis of clone sequences. Thus, for detecting novel interrelations of environmental parameters with Acidobacteria , individual populations within subgroups have to be considered.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Applied and Environmental Microbiology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....2fef291fd84772538ab69f00fd6c346f