Ancient prairies as a reference for soil organic carbon content and microbial community structure
The historic remnant prairies of Missouri display diversity above and below the soil surface and represent the few remaining acres of unconverted grassland habitat in the state. The soil microbiome is foundational to nutrient acquisition, resource partitioning, and ecosystem resilience; therefore, t...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Applied soil ecology : a section of Agriculture, ecosystems & environment ecosystems & environment, 2024-06, Vol.198, p.105355, Article 105355 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | The historic remnant prairies of Missouri display diversity above and below the soil surface and represent the few remaining acres of unconverted grassland habitat in the state. The soil microbiome is foundational to nutrient acquisition, resource partitioning, and ecosystem resilience; therefore, the intact plant-soil interactions of remnant prairies can serve as a reference for microbial community structure and ecosystem services lost due to land conversion. This research was conducted to show the importance of reference soil conditions and the variability that lies therein while contrasting degraded soil ecosystems to provide a standard to which comparable soils should be held. In this study, 35 sites across Missouri representing three prairie management conditions on similar soils and variable climatic conditions were compared to assess differences in the microbial community structure and biomass using phospholipid fatty acid (PLFA) analysis. Surface (0–7.5 cm) soil organic carbon (SOC) content provided a measure of substrate available to support microbial community health. Total microbial biomass, the biomass of individual microbial groups, selected biomarker ratios, and SOC, were significantly different across treatments and highest in remnant prairies apart from Saprophytic fungi and eukaryotes. This study demonstrated that the soil microbial community in reconstructed and restored prairie systems remained significantly diminished in biomass relative to remnant prairies, even after several decades. This study highlights the need to preserve remnant prairies, where soil is in its native state under native flora and abiotic conditions. These results also illustrate the importance of selecting remnant systems as the ecological reference standard for prairie lands.
•Remnant prairie soils contain greater microbial biomass and soil organic carbon.•Changes in land use led to significant shifts in bacterial and fungal communities.•Remnant prairies should be used as the reference state for converted prairie lands.•Soil organic carbon is a significant predictor of soil microbial biomass. |
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ISSN: | 0929-1393 1873-0272 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.apsoil.2024.105355 |