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Soil fertility is associated with fungal and bacterial richness,whereas pH is associated with community composition in polar soil microbial communities
Institution:1. Key Laboratory of Environmental and Applied Microbiology, Chinese Academy of Sciences and Environmental Microbiology Key Laboratory of Sichuan Province, Chengdu Institute of Biology, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Chengdu 610041, China;2. Graduate School, University of Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing 100049, China;3. Section of Climate Science, Illinois State Water Survey, Prairie Research Institute, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, Champaign, IL 61802, USA;4. Key Laboratory of Plant Nutrition and Fertilizer, Ministry of Agriculture/Institute of Agricultural Resources and Regional Planning, Chinese Academy of Agricultural Sciences, Beijing 100081, PR China;5. Soil and Fertilizer Institute, Qinghai Academy of Agriculture and Forestry Sciences, Qinghai University, Xining 810016, PR China;1. Shaanxi Key Laboratory of Earth Surface System and Environmental Carrying Capacity, Northwest University Xi''an, Shaanxi 710127, China;2. College of Life Sciences, Yan''an University, Yan''an 716000, Shaanxi, China;3. State Key Laboratory of Soil Erosion and Dryland Farming on the Loess Plateau, Institute of Water and Soil Conservation, Chinese Academy of Sciences and Ministry of Water Resources, Yangling 712100, Shaanxi, China;4. College of Agronomy, Northwest A&F University, Yangling 712100, Shaanxi, China
Abstract:Microbial activities in Arctic and Antarctic soils are of particular interest due to uncertainty surrounding the fate of the enormous polar soil organic matter (SOM) pools and the potential to lose unique and vulnerable micro-organisms from these ecosystems. We quantified richness, evenness and taxonomic composition of both fungi and bacteria in 223 Arctic and Antarctic soil samples across 8 locations to test the global applicability of hypotheses concerning edaphic drivers of soil microbial communities that have been primarily developed from studies of bacteria in temperate and tropical systems. We externally validated our model's conclusions with an independent dataset comprising 33 Arctic heath samples. We also explored if our system was responding to large scale climatic or biogeographical processes that we had not measured by evaluating model stability for one location, Mitchell Pennisula, that had been extensively sampled. Soil Fertility (defined as organic matter, nitrogen and chloride content) was the most important edaphic property associated with measures of α-diversity such as microbial richness and evenness (especially for fungi), whereas pH was primarily associated with measures of β-diversity such as phylogenetic structure and diversity (especially for bacteria). Surprisingly, phosphorus emerged as consistently the second most important driver of all facets of microbial community structure for both fungi and bacteria. Despite the clear importance of edaphic factors in controlling microbial communities, our analyses also indicated that fungal/bacterial interactions play a major, but causally unclear, role in structuring the soil microbial communities of which they are a part.
Keywords:Arctic  Antarctic  Bacteria  Fungi  Soil properties  pH  Structural equation modelling  Climate change
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