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Microbiome Aggregated Traits and Assembly Are More Sensitive to Soil Management than Diversity

Andrew L. Neal, David Hughes, Ian M. Clark, Janet Jansson, P. R. Hirsch

2021mSystems31 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Changes in soil microbiome diversity and function brought about by land management are predicted to influence a range of environmental services provided by soil, including provision of food and clean water. However, opportunities to compare the long-term effects of combinations of stresses imposed by different management approaches are limited. We exploit a globally unique 50-year field experiment, demonstrating that soil management practices alter microbiome diversity, community traits, and assembly. Grassland soil microbiomes are dominated by fewer-but phylogenetically more diverse-prokaryote phylotypes which sustain larger genomes than microbiomes in arable or bare fallow soil maintained free of plants. Dominant fungi in grassland soils are less phylogenetically diverse than those in arable or fallow soils. Soil tillage increases stochastic processes in microbiome assembly: this, combined with reduced plant biomass, presents opportunities for organisms with a capacity for pathogenesis to become established in stressed soils.

Topics & Concepts

MicrobiomeDiversity (politics)BiologyData scienceEvolutionary biologyGeneticsComputer sciencePolitical scienceLawSoil Carbon and Nitrogen DynamicsMicrobial Community Ecology and PhysiologyMycorrhizal Fungi and Plant Interactions
Microbiome Aggregated Traits and Assembly Are More Sensitive to Soil Management than Diversity | Litcius