Rare genera differentiate urban green space soil bacterial communities in three cities across the world

Author:

Mills Jacob G.1ORCID,Selway Caitlin A.1ORCID,Weyrich Laura S.21ORCID,Skelly Chris34,Weinstein Philip561,Thomas Torsten7ORCID,Young Jennifer M.81,Marczylo Emma9ORCID,Yadav Sudesh10ORCID,Yadav Vijay10,Lowe Andrew J.61ORCID,Breed Martin F.618ORCID

Affiliation:

1. School of Biological Sciences, The University of Adelaide, Adelaide, Australia

2. Department of Anthropology and Huck Institutes of the Life Sciences, Pennsylvania State University, Pennsylvania, USA

3. Research & Intelligence, Public Health Dorset, Dorset County Council, Dorset, UK

4. Healthy Urban Microbiome Initiative

5. School of Public Health, The University of Adelaide, Adelaide, Australia

6. Environment Institute, The University of Adelaide, Adelaide, Australia

7. Centre for Marine Science and Innovation, School of Biological, Environmental and Earth Sciences, University of New South Wales, Sydney, Australia

8. College of Science and Engineering, Flinders University, Bedford Park, South Australia

9. Toxicology Department, Centre for Radiation, Chemical and Environmental Hazards, Public Health England, Chilton, Oxfordshire, UK

10. School of Environmental Sciences, Jawaharlal Nehru University, New Delhi, India

Abstract

Vegetation complexity is potentially important for urban green space designs aimed at fostering microbial biodiversity to benefit human health. Exposure to urban microbial biodiversity may influence human health outcomes via immune training and regulation. In this context, improving human exposure to microbiota via biodiversity-centric urban green space designs is an underused opportunity. There is currently little knowledge on the association between vegetation complexity (i.e. diversity and structure) and soil microbiota of urban green spaces. Here, we investigated the association between vegetation complexity and soil bacteria in urban green spaces in Bournemouth, UK; Haikou, China; and the City of Playford, Australia by sequencing the 16S rRNA V4 gene region of soil samples and assessing bacterial diversity. We characterized these green spaces as having ‘low’ or ‘high’ vegetation complexity and explored whether these two broad categories contained similar bacterial community compositions and diversity around the world. Within cities, we observed significantly different alpha and beta diversities between vegetation complexities; however, these results varied between cities. Rare genera (<1% relative abundance individually, on average 35% relative abundance when pooled) were most likely to be significantly different in sequence abundance between vegetation complexities and therefore explained much of the differences in microbial communities observed. Overall, general associations exist between soil bacterial communities and vegetation complexity, although these are not consistent between cities. Therefore, more in-depth work is required to be done locally to derive practical actions to assist the conservation and restoration of microbial communities in urban areas.

Funder

Environment Institute, The University of Adelaide

Publisher

Microbiology Society

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