Use este identificador para citar ou linkar para este item: http://www.alice.cnptia.embrapa.br/alice/handle/doc/1108220
Título: Land use and seasonal effects on the soil microbiome of a Brazilian dry forest.
Autoria: LACERDA JÚNIOR, G. V.
NORONHA, M. F.
CABRAL, L.
DELFORNO, T. P.
SOUSA, S. T. P. de
FERNANDES JUNIOR, P. I.
MELO, I. S.
OLIVEIRA. V. M.
Afiliação: GILENO V. LACERDA JÚNIOR; MELLINE F. NORONHA; LUCÉLIA CABRAL; TIAGO P. DELFORNO; SANDERSON TARCISO PEREIRA DE SOUSA; PAULO IVAN FERNANDES JUNIOR, CPATSA; ITAMAR S. MELO; VALÉRIA M. OLIVEIRA.
Ano de publicação: 2019
Referência: Frontiers in Microbiology, v. 10, abr. 2019.
Conteúdo: Drylands occupy approximately 41% of the Earth?s terrestrial surface. Climate change and land use practices are expected to affect biogeochemical cycling by the soil microbiome in these ecosystems. Understanding how soil microbial community might respond to these drivers is extremely important to mitigate the processes of land degradation and desertification. The Caatinga, an exclusively Brazilian biome composed of an extensive seasonal tropical dry forest, is exposed to variable spatiotemporal rainfall patterns as well as strong human-driven pressures. Herein, an integrated analysis of shotgun metagenomics approach coupled to meteorological data was employed to unravel the impact of seasonality and land use change on soil microbiome from preserved and agriculture-affected experimental fields in Caatinga drylands. Multivariate analysis suggested that microbial communities of preserved soils under seasonal changes were shaped primarily by water deficit, with a strong increase of Actinobacteria and Proteobacteria members in the dry and rainy seasons, respectively. In contrast, nutrient availability notably played a critical role in driving the microbial community in agriculture-affected soils. The strong enrichment of bacterial genera belonging to the poorly-known phylum Acidobacteria (?Candidatus Solibacter? and ?Candidatus Koribacter?) in soils from dry season affected by ferti-irrigation practices presupposes a contrasting copiotrophic lifestyle and ecological role in mitigating the impact of chemical fertilization. Functional analyses identify overrepresented genes related to osmotic stress response (synthesis of osmoprotectant compounds, accumulation of potassium ions) and preferential carbon and nitrogen utilization when comparing the microbiome of preserved soils under seasonal changes, reflecting differences in the genetic potential for nutrient cycling and C acquisition in the environment. However, the prevalence of nitrosative stress and denitrification functions in irrigation/fertilization-affected soils of the dry season clearly suggest that nutrient input and disruption of natural water regime may impact biogeochemical cycles linked to the microbial processes, with potential impacts on the ecosystem functionality. These findings help to better understand how natural seasonality and agricultural management differentially affect soil microbial ecology from dry forests, providing support for the development of more sustainable land management in dryland ecosystems.
Thesagro: Floresta Nativa
Floresta
Caatinga
Solo
Uso da Terra
Floresta Tropical
Ecossistema
NAL Thesaurus: Dry forests
Palavras-chave: Floresta seca
Bioma Caatinga
Floresta seca tropical
Comunidades microbianas do solo
Metagenômica
Sazonalidade
Digital Object Identifier: 10.3389/fmicb.2019.00648
Notas: Article 648.
Tipo do material: Artigo de periódico
Acesso: openAccess
Aparece nas coleções:Artigo em periódico indexado (CPATSA)

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