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Soil minerals affect taxon-specific bacterial growth

Earth Sciences

Soil minerals affect taxon-specific bacterial growth

B. K. Finley, R. L. Mau, et al.

This groundbreaking study by Brianna K. Finley and colleagues explores how different soil mineral compositions, especially short-range order minerals, affect bacterial communities and their growth patterns. Discover how carbon processing and soil carbon dynamics are influenced by mineral and substrate interactions.... show more
Abstract
Secondary minerals (clays and metal oxides) are important components of the soil matrix. Clay minerals affect soil carbon persistence and cycling, and they also select for distinct microbial communities. Here we show that soil mineral assemblages—particularly short-range order minerals—affect both bacterial community composition and taxon-specific growth. Three soils with different parent material and presence of short-range order minerals were collected from ecosystems with similar vegetation and climate. These three soils were provided with 18O-labeled water and incubated with or without artificial root exudates or pine needle litter. Quantitative stable isotope probing was used to determine taxon-specific growth. We found that the growth of bacteria varied among soils of different mineral assemblages but found the trend of growth suppression in the presence of short-range order minerals. Relative growth of bacteria declined with increasing concentration of short-range order minerals between 25–36% of taxa present in all soils. Carbon addition in the form of plant litter or root exudates weakly affected relative growth of taxa (p = 0.09) compared to the soil type (p < 0.01). However, both exudate and litter carbon stimulated growth for at least 34% of families in the soils with the most and least short-range order minerals. In the intermediate short-range order soil, fresh carbon reduced growth for more bacterial families than were stimulated. These results highlight how bacterial–mineral–substrate interactions are critical to soil organic carbon processing, and how growth variation in bacterial taxa in these interactions may contribute to soil carbon persistence and loss.
Publisher
The ISME Journal
Published On
Dec 20, 2021
Authors
Brianna K. Finley, Rebecca L. Mau, Michaela Hayer, Bram W. Stone, Ember M. Morrissey, Benjamin J. Koch, Craig Rasmussen, Paul Dijkstra, Egbert Schwartz, Bruce A. Hungate
Tags
soil minerals
bacterial community
short-range order minerals
carbon processing
root exudates
taxon-specific growth
soil organic carbon
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