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Temporal and spatial influences incur reconfiguration of Arctic heathland soil bacterial community structure

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Temporal and spatial influences incur reconfiguration of Arctic heathland soil bacterial community structure. / Hill, Richard; Saetnan, Eli R.; Scullion, John et al.
In: Environmental Microbiology, Vol. 18, No. 6, 06.2016, p. 1942-1953.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

Hill, R, Saetnan, ER, Scullion, J, Gwynn-Jones, D & Ostle, NJ 2016, 'Temporal and spatial influences incur reconfiguration of Arctic heathland soil bacterial community structure', Environmental Microbiology, vol. 18, no. 6, pp. 1942-1953. https://doi.org/10.1111/1462-2920.13017

APA

Hill, R., Saetnan, E. R., Scullion, J., Gwynn-Jones, D., & Ostle, N. J. (2016). Temporal and spatial influences incur reconfiguration of Arctic heathland soil bacterial community structure. Environmental Microbiology, 18(6), 1942-1953. https://doi.org/10.1111/1462-2920.13017

Vancouver

Hill R, Saetnan ER, Scullion J, Gwynn-Jones D, Ostle NJ. Temporal and spatial influences incur reconfiguration of Arctic heathland soil bacterial community structure. Environmental Microbiology. 2016 Jun;18(6):1942-1953. Epub 2015 Sept 16. doi: 10.1111/1462-2920.13017

Author

Hill, Richard ; Saetnan, Eli R. ; Scullion, John et al. / Temporal and spatial influences incur reconfiguration of Arctic heathland soil bacterial community structure. In: Environmental Microbiology. 2016 ; Vol. 18, No. 6. pp. 1942-1953.

Bibtex

@article{21daa3a101b34bc5b3431103efdacbf2,
title = "Temporal and spatial influences incur reconfiguration of Arctic heathland soil bacterial community structure",
abstract = "Microbial responses to Arctic climate change could radically alter the stability of major stores of soil carbon. However, the sensitivity of plot-scale experiments simulating climate change effects on Arctic heathland soils to potential confounding effects of spatial and temporal changes in soil microbial communities is unknown. Here, the variation in heathland soil bacterial communities at two survey sites in Sweden between spring and summer 2013 and at scales between 0–1 m and, 1–100 m and between sites (> 100 m) were investigated in parallel using 16S rRNA gene T-RFLP and amplicon sequencing. T-RFLP did not reveal spatial structuring of communities at scales < 100 m in any site or season. However, temporal changes were striking. Amplicon sequencing corroborated shifts from r- to K-selected taxon-dominated communities, influencing in silico predictions of functional potential. Network analyses reveal temporal keystone taxa, with a spring betaproteobacterial sub-network centred upon a Burkholderia operational taxonomic unit (OTU) and a reconfiguration to a summer sub-network centred upon an alphaproteobacterial OTU. Although spatial structuring effects may not confound comparison between plot-scale treatments, temporal change is a significant influence. Moreover, the prominence of two temporally exclusive keystone taxa suggests that the stability of Arctic heathland soil bacterial communities could be disproportionally influenced by seasonal perturbations affecting individual taxa.",
author = "Richard Hill and Saetnan, {Eli R.} and John Scullion and Dylan Gwynn-Jones and Ostle, {Nicholas John}",
year = "2016",
month = jun,
doi = "10.1111/1462-2920.13017",
language = "English",
volume = "18",
pages = "1942--1953",
journal = "Environmental Microbiology",
issn = "1462-2912",
publisher = "Wiley-Blackwell",
number = "6",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Temporal and spatial influences incur reconfiguration of Arctic heathland soil bacterial community structure

AU - Hill, Richard

AU - Saetnan, Eli R.

AU - Scullion, John

AU - Gwynn-Jones, Dylan

AU - Ostle, Nicholas John

PY - 2016/6

Y1 - 2016/6

N2 - Microbial responses to Arctic climate change could radically alter the stability of major stores of soil carbon. However, the sensitivity of plot-scale experiments simulating climate change effects on Arctic heathland soils to potential confounding effects of spatial and temporal changes in soil microbial communities is unknown. Here, the variation in heathland soil bacterial communities at two survey sites in Sweden between spring and summer 2013 and at scales between 0–1 m and, 1–100 m and between sites (> 100 m) were investigated in parallel using 16S rRNA gene T-RFLP and amplicon sequencing. T-RFLP did not reveal spatial structuring of communities at scales < 100 m in any site or season. However, temporal changes were striking. Amplicon sequencing corroborated shifts from r- to K-selected taxon-dominated communities, influencing in silico predictions of functional potential. Network analyses reveal temporal keystone taxa, with a spring betaproteobacterial sub-network centred upon a Burkholderia operational taxonomic unit (OTU) and a reconfiguration to a summer sub-network centred upon an alphaproteobacterial OTU. Although spatial structuring effects may not confound comparison between plot-scale treatments, temporal change is a significant influence. Moreover, the prominence of two temporally exclusive keystone taxa suggests that the stability of Arctic heathland soil bacterial communities could be disproportionally influenced by seasonal perturbations affecting individual taxa.

AB - Microbial responses to Arctic climate change could radically alter the stability of major stores of soil carbon. However, the sensitivity of plot-scale experiments simulating climate change effects on Arctic heathland soils to potential confounding effects of spatial and temporal changes in soil microbial communities is unknown. Here, the variation in heathland soil bacterial communities at two survey sites in Sweden between spring and summer 2013 and at scales between 0–1 m and, 1–100 m and between sites (> 100 m) were investigated in parallel using 16S rRNA gene T-RFLP and amplicon sequencing. T-RFLP did not reveal spatial structuring of communities at scales < 100 m in any site or season. However, temporal changes were striking. Amplicon sequencing corroborated shifts from r- to K-selected taxon-dominated communities, influencing in silico predictions of functional potential. Network analyses reveal temporal keystone taxa, with a spring betaproteobacterial sub-network centred upon a Burkholderia operational taxonomic unit (OTU) and a reconfiguration to a summer sub-network centred upon an alphaproteobacterial OTU. Although spatial structuring effects may not confound comparison between plot-scale treatments, temporal change is a significant influence. Moreover, the prominence of two temporally exclusive keystone taxa suggests that the stability of Arctic heathland soil bacterial communities could be disproportionally influenced by seasonal perturbations affecting individual taxa.

U2 - 10.1111/1462-2920.13017

DO - 10.1111/1462-2920.13017

M3 - Journal article

VL - 18

SP - 1942

EP - 1953

JO - Environmental Microbiology

JF - Environmental Microbiology

SN - 1462-2912

IS - 6

ER -