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  5. The effects of climate and soil depth on living and dead bacterial communities along a longitudinal gradient in Chile

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Article
English
2024

The effects of climate and soil depth on living and dead bacterial communities along a longitudinal gradient in Chile

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0 Files

English
2024
The Science of The Total Environment
Vol 945
DOI: 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2024.173846

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Francisco J. Matus
Francisco J. Matus

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Xiuling Wang
Lars Ganzert
Alexander Bartholomäus
+9 more

Abstract

Soil bacterial communities play a critical role in shaping soil stability and formation, exhibiting a dynamic interaction with local climate and soil depth. We employed an innovative DNA separation method to characterize microbial assemblages in low-biomass environments such as deserts and distinguish between intracellular DNA (iDNA) and extracellular DNA (eDNA) in soils. This approach, combined with analyses of physicochemical properties and co-occurrence networks, investigated soil bacterial communities across four sites representing diverse climatic gradients (i.e., arid, semi-arid, Mediterranean, and humid) along the Chilean Coastal Cordillera. The separation method yielded a distinctive unimodal pattern in the iDNA pool alpha diversity, increasing from arid to semi-arid climates and decreasing in humid environments, highlighting the rapid feedback of the iDNA community to increasing soil moisture. In the arid region, harsh surface conditions restrict bacterial growth, leading to peak iDNA abundance and diversity occurring in slightly deeper layers than the other sites. Our findings confirmed the association between specialist bacteria and ecosystem-functional traits. We observed transitions from Halomonas and Delftia, resistant to extreme arid environments, to Class AD3 and the genus Bradyrhizobium, associated with plants and organic matter in humid environments. The distance-based redundancy analysis (dbRDA) analysis revealed that soil pH and moisture were the key parameters that influenced bacterial community variation. The eDNA community correlated slightly better with the environment than the iDNA community, whereas the iDNA community was more sensitive to changes in soil physicochemical parameters. Soil depth was found to influence the iDNA community significantly but not the eDNA community, which might be related to depth-related metabolic activity. Our investigation into iDNA communities uncovered deterministic community assembly and distinct co-occurrence modules correlated with unique bacterial taxa, thereby showing connections with sites and key environmental factors. The study additionally revealed the effects of climatic gradients and soil depth on living and dead bacterial communities, emphasizing the need to distinguish between iDNA and eDNA pools.

How to cite this publication

Xiuling Wang, Lars Ganzert, Alexander Bartholomäus, Rahma Amen, Sizhong Yang, Carolina Merino Guzmán, Francisco J. Matus, Maria Fernanda Albornoz, Felipe Aburto, Rómulo Oses, Thomas Friedl, Dirk Wagner (2024). The effects of climate and soil depth on living and dead bacterial communities along a longitudinal gradient in Chile. The Science of The Total Environment, 945, pp. 173846-173846, DOI: 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2024.173846.

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Publication Details

Type

Article

Year

2024

Authors

12

Datasets

0

Total Files

0

Language

English

Journal

The Science of The Total Environment

DOI

10.1016/j.scitotenv.2024.173846

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