Soil-Borne Microbial Functional Structure across Different Land Uses

Joint Authors

Zhou, Jizhong Z.
Kowalchuk, George A.
van Veen, Johannes Antonius
Kuramae, Eiko

Source

The Scientific World Journal

Issue

Vol. 2014, Issue 2014 (31 Dec. 2014), pp.1-8, 8 p.

Publisher

Hindawi Publishing Corporation

Publication Date

2014-08-10

Country of Publication

Egypt

No. of Pages

8

Main Subjects

Medicine
Information Technology and Computer Science

Abstract EN

Land use change alters the structure and composition of microbial communities.

However, the links between environmental factors and microbial functions are not well understood.

Here we interrogated the functional structure of soil microbial communities across different land uses.

In a multivariate regression tree analysis of soil physicochemical properties and genes detected by functional microarrays, the main factor that explained the different microbial community functional structures was C : N ratio.

C : N ratio showed a significant positive correlation with clay and soil pH.

Fields with low C : N ratio had an overrepresentation of genes for carbon degradation, carbon fixation, metal reductase, and organic remediation categories, while fields with high C : N ratio had an overrepresentation of genes encoding dissimilatory sulfate reductase, methane oxidation, nitrification, and nitrogen fixation.

The most abundant genes related to carbon degradation comprised bacterial and fungal cellulases; bacterial and fungal chitinases; fungal laccases; and bacterial, fungal, and oomycete polygalacturonases.

The high number of genes related to organic remediation was probably driven by high phosphate content, while the high number of genes for nitrification was probably explained by high total nitrogen content.

The functional gene diversity found in different soils did not group the sites accordingly to land management.

Rather, the soil factors, C : N ratio, phosphate, and total N, were the main factors driving the differences in functional genes across the fields examined.

American Psychological Association (APA)

Kuramae, Eiko& Zhou, Jizhong Z.& Kowalchuk, George A.& van Veen, Johannes Antonius. 2014. Soil-Borne Microbial Functional Structure across Different Land Uses. The Scientific World Journal،Vol. 2014, no. 2014, pp.1-8.
https://search.emarefa.net/detail/BIM-1048775

Modern Language Association (MLA)

Kuramae, Eiko…[et al.]. Soil-Borne Microbial Functional Structure across Different Land Uses. The Scientific World Journal No. 2014 (2014), pp.1-8.
https://search.emarefa.net/detail/BIM-1048775

American Medical Association (AMA)

Kuramae, Eiko& Zhou, Jizhong Z.& Kowalchuk, George A.& van Veen, Johannes Antonius. Soil-Borne Microbial Functional Structure across Different Land Uses. The Scientific World Journal. 2014. Vol. 2014, no. 2014, pp.1-8.
https://search.emarefa.net/detail/BIM-1048775

Data Type

Journal Articles

Language

English

Notes

Includes bibliographical references

Record ID

BIM-1048775