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Bacterial and archaeal taxa are reliable indicators of soil restoration across distributed calcareous grasslands

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Bacterial and archaeal taxa are reliable indicators of soil restoration across distributed calcareous grasslands. / Armbruster, Melanie; Goodall, Tim; Hirsch, Penny et al.
In: European Journal of Soil Science, Vol. 72, No. 6, 30.11.2021, p. 2430-2444.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

Armbruster, M, Goodall, T, Hirsch, P, Ostle, N, Puissant, J, Fagan, K, Pywell, R & Griffiths, R 2021, 'Bacterial and archaeal taxa are reliable indicators of soil restoration across distributed calcareous grasslands', European Journal of Soil Science, vol. 72, no. 6, pp. 2430-2444. https://doi.org/10.1111/ejss.12977

APA

Armbruster, M., Goodall, T., Hirsch, P., Ostle, N., Puissant, J., Fagan, K., Pywell, R., & Griffiths, R. (2021). Bacterial and archaeal taxa are reliable indicators of soil restoration across distributed calcareous grasslands. European Journal of Soil Science, 72(6), 2430-2444. https://doi.org/10.1111/ejss.12977

Vancouver

Armbruster M, Goodall T, Hirsch P, Ostle N, Puissant J, Fagan K et al. Bacterial and archaeal taxa are reliable indicators of soil restoration across distributed calcareous grasslands. European Journal of Soil Science. 2021 Nov 30;72(6):2430-2444. Epub 2020 Apr 25. doi: 10.1111/ejss.12977

Author

Armbruster, Melanie ; Goodall, Tim ; Hirsch, Penny et al. / Bacterial and archaeal taxa are reliable indicators of soil restoration across distributed calcareous grasslands. In: European Journal of Soil Science. 2021 ; Vol. 72, No. 6. pp. 2430-2444.

Bibtex

@article{98c0782a76404af686c776ce21b82409,
title = "Bacterial and archaeal taxa are reliable indicators of soil restoration across distributed calcareous grasslands",
abstract = "Land use intensification can reduce soil carbon stocks and changes microbial community biodiversity and functionality. However, there is a lack of consensus on whether management consistently affects microbial biodiversity across geographic scales, and how this relates to altered soil function. From a regulatory and monitoring perspective, there is a need to identify functionally relevant indicators of land use in order to evaluate the progress of soil restoration approaches. We performed a landscape scale survey of unimproved calcareous grasslands paired with local arable contrasts, and assessed the consistency of responses in a variety of soil, biotic and functional measures. In addition, adjacent grasslands undergoing restoration were assessed to identify soil microbial indicators of recovery. Organic matter content was consistently larger in grasslands than in arable fields, and increased with time in the restoring sites. Molecular comparisons of grassland versus arable soils revealed numerous bacterial, archaeal and fungal indicators, with more representatives of Ca. Xiphinematobacter, DA101, Bradyrhizobium, Rhodoplanes, Mycobacteria and Mortierella in old grassland soils, while Nitrososphaera, Sporosarcina and Alternaria infectoria were more abundant in arable soils. Extracellular enzymatic responses were more variable with none of the eight investigated enzymes being consistent indicators of grassland or arable soils. Correlation analyses, incorporating the molecular and enzymatic responses across all surveyed soils, revealed that molecular indicators were more strongly correlated with soil organic matter increases with restoration of arable soils. Our results highlight that microbial taxa are among the most sensitive indicators of soil restoration, and we identify consistent responses of specific taxa to management across geographic scales. This discovery will be important for both the instigation and monitoring of the soil restoration.",
keywords = "arable soil, grassland, land use indicator, microbial community, NGS, restoration, soil monitoring, soil organic matter",
author = "Melanie Armbruster and Tim Goodall and Penny Hirsch and Nick Ostle and Jeremy Puissant and Kate Fagan and Richard Pywell and Rob Griffiths",
year = "2021",
month = nov,
day = "30",
doi = "10.1111/ejss.12977",
language = "English",
volume = "72",
pages = "2430--2444",
journal = "European Journal of Soil Science",
issn = "1351-0754",
publisher = "Wiley-Blackwell",
number = "6",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Bacterial and archaeal taxa are reliable indicators of soil restoration across distributed calcareous grasslands

AU - Armbruster, Melanie

AU - Goodall, Tim

AU - Hirsch, Penny

AU - Ostle, Nick

AU - Puissant, Jeremy

AU - Fagan, Kate

AU - Pywell, Richard

AU - Griffiths, Rob

PY - 2021/11/30

Y1 - 2021/11/30

N2 - Land use intensification can reduce soil carbon stocks and changes microbial community biodiversity and functionality. However, there is a lack of consensus on whether management consistently affects microbial biodiversity across geographic scales, and how this relates to altered soil function. From a regulatory and monitoring perspective, there is a need to identify functionally relevant indicators of land use in order to evaluate the progress of soil restoration approaches. We performed a landscape scale survey of unimproved calcareous grasslands paired with local arable contrasts, and assessed the consistency of responses in a variety of soil, biotic and functional measures. In addition, adjacent grasslands undergoing restoration were assessed to identify soil microbial indicators of recovery. Organic matter content was consistently larger in grasslands than in arable fields, and increased with time in the restoring sites. Molecular comparisons of grassland versus arable soils revealed numerous bacterial, archaeal and fungal indicators, with more representatives of Ca. Xiphinematobacter, DA101, Bradyrhizobium, Rhodoplanes, Mycobacteria and Mortierella in old grassland soils, while Nitrososphaera, Sporosarcina and Alternaria infectoria were more abundant in arable soils. Extracellular enzymatic responses were more variable with none of the eight investigated enzymes being consistent indicators of grassland or arable soils. Correlation analyses, incorporating the molecular and enzymatic responses across all surveyed soils, revealed that molecular indicators were more strongly correlated with soil organic matter increases with restoration of arable soils. Our results highlight that microbial taxa are among the most sensitive indicators of soil restoration, and we identify consistent responses of specific taxa to management across geographic scales. This discovery will be important for both the instigation and monitoring of the soil restoration.

AB - Land use intensification can reduce soil carbon stocks and changes microbial community biodiversity and functionality. However, there is a lack of consensus on whether management consistently affects microbial biodiversity across geographic scales, and how this relates to altered soil function. From a regulatory and monitoring perspective, there is a need to identify functionally relevant indicators of land use in order to evaluate the progress of soil restoration approaches. We performed a landscape scale survey of unimproved calcareous grasslands paired with local arable contrasts, and assessed the consistency of responses in a variety of soil, biotic and functional measures. In addition, adjacent grasslands undergoing restoration were assessed to identify soil microbial indicators of recovery. Organic matter content was consistently larger in grasslands than in arable fields, and increased with time in the restoring sites. Molecular comparisons of grassland versus arable soils revealed numerous bacterial, archaeal and fungal indicators, with more representatives of Ca. Xiphinematobacter, DA101, Bradyrhizobium, Rhodoplanes, Mycobacteria and Mortierella in old grassland soils, while Nitrososphaera, Sporosarcina and Alternaria infectoria were more abundant in arable soils. Extracellular enzymatic responses were more variable with none of the eight investigated enzymes being consistent indicators of grassland or arable soils. Correlation analyses, incorporating the molecular and enzymatic responses across all surveyed soils, revealed that molecular indicators were more strongly correlated with soil organic matter increases with restoration of arable soils. Our results highlight that microbial taxa are among the most sensitive indicators of soil restoration, and we identify consistent responses of specific taxa to management across geographic scales. This discovery will be important for both the instigation and monitoring of the soil restoration.

KW - arable soil

KW - grassland

KW - land use indicator

KW - microbial community

KW - NGS

KW - restoration

KW - soil monitoring

KW - soil organic matter

U2 - 10.1111/ejss.12977

DO - 10.1111/ejss.12977

M3 - Journal article

VL - 72

SP - 2430

EP - 2444

JO - European Journal of Soil Science

JF - European Journal of Soil Science

SN - 1351-0754

IS - 6

ER -