Agricultural land usage transforms nitrifier population ecology
Autor: | Anthony D. Bertagnolli, Dylan McCalmont, Kelley A. Meinhardt, David A. Stahl, Sally Brown, Stuart E. Strand, Steven C. Fransen |
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Rok vydání: | 2016 |
Předmět: |
0301 basic medicine
Ecology 030106 microbiology Nitrosopumilus Biology Population ecology biology.organism_classification Microbiology 03 medical and health sciences chemistry.chemical_compound Nitrososphaera 030104 developmental biology Nitrate chemistry Botany Ecosystem Nitrification Soil microbiology Ecology Evolution Behavior and Systematics Archaea |
Zdroj: | Environmental Microbiology. 18:1918-1929 |
ISSN: | 1462-2912 |
DOI: | 10.1111/1462-2920.13114 |
Popis: | Application of nitrogen fertilizer has altered terrestrial ecosystems. Ammonia is nitrified by ammonia and nitrite-oxidizing microorganisms, converting ammonia to highly mobile nitrate, contributing to the loss of nitrogen, soil nutrients and production of detrimental nitrogen oxides. Mitigating these costs is of critical importance to a growing bioenergy industry. To resolve the impact of management on nitrifying populations, amplicon sequencing of markers associated with ammonia and nitrite-oxidizing taxa (ammonia monooxygenase-amoA, nitrite oxidoreductase-nxrB, respectively) was conducted from long-term managed and nearby native soils in Eastern Washington, USA. Native nitrifier population structure was altered profoundly by management. The native ammonia-oxidizing archaeal community (comprised primarily by Nitrososphaera sister subclusters 1.1 and 2) was displaced by populations of Nitrosopumilus, Nitrosotalea and different assemblages of Nitrososphaera (subcluster 1.1, and unassociated lineages of Nitrososphaera). A displacement of ammonia-oxidizing bacterial taxa was associated with management, with native groups of Nitrosospira (cluster 2 related, cluster 3A.2) displaced by Nitrosospira clusters 8B and 3A.1. A shift in nitrite-oxidizing bacteria (NOB) was correlated with management, but distribution patterns could not be linked exclusively to management. Dominant nxrB sequences displayed only distant relationships to other NOB isolates and environmental clones. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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