Fine-Scale Spatial Structure of Soil Microbial Communities in Burrows of a Keystone Rodent Following Mass Mortality

被引:3
|
作者
Kaufmann, Chadwick [1 ]
Cassin-Sackett, Loren [1 ,2 ]
机构
[1] Univ S Florida, Dept Integrat Biol, Tampa, FL 33620 USA
[2] Univ Louisiana, Dept Biol, Lafayette, LA 70503 USA
来源
关键词
environmental microbiome project; nutrient pulse; grasslands; pathogens; extirpation; spatial partitioning; BACTERIAL COMMUNITIES; YERSINIA-PESTIS; PLANT DIVERSITY; PLAGUE; POPULATIONS; GREENGENES; FEEDBACKS; RESPONSES; INVASION; PATTERNS;
D O I
10.3389/fevo.2021.758348
中图分类号
Q14 [生态学(生物生态学)];
学科分类号
071012 ; 0713 ;
摘要
Soil microbial communities both reflect and influence biotic and abiotic processes occurring at or near the soil surface. Ecosystem engineers that physically alter the soil surface, such as burrowing ground squirrels, are expected to influence the distribution of soil microbial communities. Black-tailed prairie dogs (Cynomys ludovicianus) construct complex burrows in which activities such as nesting, defecating, and dying are partitioned spatially into different chambers. Prairie dogs also experience large-scale die-offs due to sylvatic plague, caused by the bacterium Yersinia pestis, which lead to mass mortality events with potential repercussions on microbial communities. We used 16S sequencing to examine microbial communities in soil that was excavated by prairie dogs from different burrow locations, and surface soil that was used in the construction of burrow entrances, in populations that experienced plague die-offs. Following the QIIME2 pipeline, we assessed microbial diversity at several taxonomic levels among burrow regions. To do so, we computed community similarity metrics (Bray-Curtis, Jaccard, and weighted and unweighted UniFrac) among samples and community diversity indexes (Shannon and Faith phylogenetic diversity indexes) within each sample. Microbial communities differed across burrow regions, and several taxa exhibited spatial variation in relative abundance. Microbial ecological diversity (Shannon index) was highest in soil recently excavated from within burrows and soils associated with dead animals, and was lowest in soils associated with scat. Phylogenetic diversity varied only marginally within burrows, but the trends paralleled those for Shannon diversity. Yersinia was detected in four samples from one colony, marking the first time the genus has been sampled from soil on prairie dog colonies. The presence of Yersinia was a significant predictor of five bacterial families and eight microbial genera, most of which were rare taxa found in higher abundance in the presence of Yersinia, and one of which, Dictyostelium, has been proposed as an enzootic reservoir of Y. pestis. This study demonstrates that mammalian modifications to soil structure by physical alterations and by mass mortality can influence the distribution and diversity of microbial communities.
引用
收藏
页数:11
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [41] Complex fine-scale spatial genetic structure in Epidendrum rhopalostele: an epiphytic orchid
    Torres, Elena
    Riofrio, Maria-Lorena
    Iriondo, Jose M.
    HEREDITY, 2019, 122 (04) : 458 - 467
  • [42] Dispersal constraints and fine-scale spatial genetic structure in two earthworm species
    Dupont, Lise
    Gresille, Ysoline
    Richard, Benoit
    Decaens, Thibaud
    Mathieu, Jerome
    BIOLOGICAL JOURNAL OF THE LINNEAN SOCIETY, 2015, 114 (02) : 335 - 347
  • [43] Spatial patterns of soil microbial communities and implications for precision soil management at the field scale
    Jasmine Neupane
    Wenxuan Guo
    Guofeng Cao
    Fangyuan Zhang
    Lindsey Slaughter
    Sanjit Deb
    Precision Agriculture, 2022, 23 : 1008 - 1026
  • [44] Spatial patterns of soil microbial communities and implications for precision soil management at the field scale
    Neupane, Jasmine
    Guo, Wenxuan
    Cao, Guofeng
    Zhang, Fangyuan
    Slaughter, Lindsey
    Deb, Sanjit
    PRECISION AGRICULTURE, 2022, 23 (03) : 1008 - 1026
  • [45] Fine-scale spatial variability of physical and biological soil properties in Kingston, Rhode Island
    Amador, JA
    Wang, Y
    Savin, MC
    Görres, JH
    GEODERMA, 2000, 98 (1-2) : 83 - 94
  • [46] Exploring fine-scale assembly of ectomycorrhizal fungal communities through phylogenetic and spatial distribution analyses
    Shinnam Yoo
    Yoonhee Cho
    Ki Hyeong Park
    Young Woon Lim
    Mycorrhiza, 2022, 32 : 439 - 449
  • [47] Exploring fine-scale assembly of ectomycorrhizal fungal communities through phylogenetic and spatial distribution analyses
    Yoo, Shinnam
    Cho, Yoonhee
    Park, Ki Hyeong
    Lim, Young Woon
    MYCORRHIZA, 2022, 32 (5-6) : 439 - 449
  • [48] Assessment of the spatial variability of intertidal benthic communities by axial tomodensitometry: importance of fine-scale heterogeneity
    Mermillod-Blondin, F
    Marie, S
    Desrosiers, G
    Long, B
    de Montety, L
    Michaud, E
    Stora, G
    JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL MARINE BIOLOGY AND ECOLOGY, 2003, 287 (02) : 193 - 208
  • [49] Fine-scale effect of karst rock outcrops on adjacent soil and plant communities in Southwest China
    Shen, You Xin
    Wang, Qing He
    Zhao, Zhi Meng
    Yuan, Chuang
    CATENA, 2022, 219
  • [50] Fine-scale spatial homogenization of microbial habitats: a multivariate index of headwater wetland complex condition
    Moon, Jessica B.
    Wardrop, Denice H.
    Smithwick, Erica A. H.
    Naithani, Kusum J.
    ECOLOGICAL APPLICATIONS, 2019, 29 (01)