Project description:Impact of long-term fertilization on bacterial communities in one at the long term static fertilization experiment in Bad Lauchstadt
Project description:Enclosure experiments are frequently used to investigate the impact of changing environmental conditions on microbial assemblages. Yet, the question how individual members of bacterial communities respond to challenges posed by the incubation itself remained unanswered. We used metaproteomic profiling, 16S rRNA gene analysis and high nucleic acid content analysis to monitor bacterial communities during long-term incubations (55 days) under marine (M1), mesohaline (M2) and oligohaline (M3) conditions with and without the addition of terrestrial dissolved organic matter. Our results showed that early in the experiment (after one week, T2), bacterial communities were highly diverse and their composition differed significantly between marine, mesohaline and oligohaline conditions. Controls (BS) and tDOM-treated samples (FKB) showed notable differences at this stage. In contrast, in the late phase of the experiment (after 55 days, T6), bacterial communities in both, manipulated and untreated marine and mesohaline enclosures were quite similar to each other and were dominated by gammaproteobacterial Spongiibacter. In the oligohaline enclosure, the actinobacterial hgc-I clade was very abundant in this phase. Our findings suggest that individual capacities, e.g. grazing-resistance, antibiotics production, and the ability to access alternative carbon sources may enable Spongiibacter and hgc-I clade members to successfully prevail during long-term incubations. Bacterial community composition in enclosure experiments thus seems to be strongly influenced by the individual inherent bacterial strategies to cope with the incubation as such. Researchers intending to investigate the effects of manipulation on complex microbial communities may therefore want to use short incubation periods or sophisticated systems that avoid these unspecific effects of long-term experiments.
2019-07-09 | PXD011160 | Pride
Project description:Soil prokaryotic and fungal communities in long-term N fertilization trial
Project description:Microbes play key roles in diverse biogeochemical processes including nutrient cycling. However, responses of soil microbial community at the functional gene level to long-term fertilization, especially integrated fertilization (chemical combined with organic fertilization) remain unclear. Here we used microarray-based GeoChip techniques to explore the shifts of soil microbial functional community in a nutrient-poor paddy soil with long-term (21 years).The long-term fertilization experiment site (set up in 1990) was located in Taoyuan agro-ecosystem research station (28°55’N, 111°27’E), Chinese Academy of Sciences, Hunan Province, China, with a double-cropped rice system. fertilization at various regimes.