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DOI: 10.1038/s41522-021-00187-7
¤ OpenAccess: Gold
This work has “Gold” OA status. This means it is published in an Open Access journal that is indexed by the DOAJ.

Long-term warming in a Mediterranean-type grassland affects soil bacterial functional potential but not bacterial taxonomic composition

Ying Gao,Jingtao Ding,Mengting Yuan,Nona R. Chiariello,Kathryn M. Docherty,C. B. Field,Qun Gao,Baohua Gu,Jessica Gutknecht,Bruce A. Hungate,Xavier Le Roux,Audrey Niboyet,Qi Qi,Zhou Shi,Jizhong Zhou,Yunfeng Yang

Denitrifying bacteria
Microbial population biology
Biology
2021
Abstract Climate warming is known to impact ecosystem composition and functioning. However, it remains largely unclear how soil microbial communities respond to long-term, moderate warming. In this study, we used Illumina sequencing and microarrays (GeoChip 5.0) to analyze taxonomic and functional gene compositions of the soil microbial community after 14 years of warming (at 0.8–1.0 °C for 10 years and then 1.5–2.0 °C for 4 years) in a Californian grassland. Long-term warming had no detectable effect on the taxonomic composition of soil bacterial community, nor on any plant or abiotic soil variables. In contrast, functional gene compositions differed between warming and control for bacterial, archaeal, and fungal communities. Functional genes associated with labile carbon (C) degradation increased in relative abundance in the warming treatment, whereas those associated with recalcitrant C degradation decreased. A number of functional genes associated with nitrogen (N) cycling (e.g., denitrifying genes encoding nitrate-, nitrite-, and nitrous oxidereductases) decreased, whereas nifH gene encoding nitrogenase increased in the warming treatment. These results suggest that microbial functional potentials are more sensitive to long-term moderate warming than the taxonomic composition of microbial community.
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    Long-term warming in a Mediterranean-type grassland affects soil bacterial functional potential but not bacterial taxonomic composition” is a paper by Ying Gao Jingtao Ding Mengting Yuan Nona R. Chiariello Kathryn M. Docherty C. B. Field Qun Gao Baohua Gu Jessica Gutknecht Bruce A. Hungate Xavier Le Roux Audrey Niboyet Qi Qi Zhou Shi Jizhong Zhou Yunfeng Yang published in 2021. It has an Open Access status of “gold”. You can read and download a PDF Full Text of this paper here.