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Starving the soil of plant inputs for 50 years reduces abundance but not diversity of soil bacterial communities
Authors:Penny R. Hirsch   Lucy M. Gilliam   Saran P. Sohi   Jennie K. Williams   Ian M. Clark  Phil J. Murray  
Affiliation:aCross Institute Programme for Sustainable Soil Function, Rothamsted Research, Harpenden, Herts AL5 2JQ, UK;bCross Institute Programme for Sustainable Soil Function, North Wyke Research, Okehampton, Devon EX20 2SB, UK;cUniversity of Edinburgh, School of GeoSciences, Edinburgh EH9 3JY, UK
Abstract:If soil communities rely on plant-derived carbon, is biodiversity lost when this primary source is removed? Soil microbial and mesofaunal communities at the Rothamsted Highfield site were compared under a mixed grass sward, arable rotation and a section maintained as a bare-fallow for the past 50 years by regular tillage. Organic matter reserves have been degraded and microbial and mesofaunal numbers and mite diversity have declined in this unique bare-fallow site, where fresh carbon inputs have been drastically reduced. However, it supports a species-rich metabolically active bacterial community of similar diversity to that in soil maintained as grass sward. Thus in contrast to soil mesofauna, bacterial diversity (but not abundance) is apparently independent of plant inputs.
Keywords:Microbial communities   Mesofauna   Bacteria   Community abundance   Community diversity   Organic carbon   Organic matter fractions   Grassland   Arable management   Bare-fallow
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