Author:
Maltz Mia R.,Carey Chelsea J.,Freund Hannah L.,Botthoff Jon K.,Hart Stephen C.,Stajich Jason E.,Aarons Sarah M.,Aciego Sarah M.,Blakowski Molly,Dove Nicholas C.,Barnes Morgan E.,Pombubpa Nuttapon,Aronson Emma L.
Abstract
Dust provides an ecologically significant input of nutrients, especially in slowly eroding ecosystems where chemical weathering intensity limits nutrient inputs from underlying bedrock. In addition to nutrient inputs, incoming dust is a vector for dispersing dust-associated microorganisms. While little is known about dust-microbial dispersal, dust deposits may have transformative effects on ecosystems far from where the dust was emitted. Using molecular analyses, we examined spatiotemporal variation in incoming dust microbiomes along an elevational gradient within the Sierra Nevada of California. We sampled throughout two dry seasons and found that dust microbiomes differed by elevation across two summer dry seasons (2014 and 2015), which corresponded to competing droughts in dust source areas. Dust microbial taxa richness decreased with elevation and was inversely proportional to dust heterogeneity. Likewise, dust phosphorus content increased with elevation. At lower elevations, early season dust microbiomes were more diverse than those found later in the year. The relative abundances of microbial groups shifted during the summer dry season. Furthermore, mutualistic fungal diversity increased with elevation, which may have corresponded with the biogeography of their plant hosts. Although dust fungal pathogen diversity was equivalent across elevations, elevation and sampling month interactions for the relative abundance, diversity, and richness of fungal pathogens suggest that these pathogens differed temporally across elevations, with potential implications for humans and wildlife. This study shows that landscape topography and droughts in source locations may alter the composition and diversity of ecologically relevant dust-associated microorganisms.
Funder
Office of the President, University of California
National Science Foundation
Subject
Microbiology (medical),Microbiology
Reference119 articles.
1. Competing droughts affect dust delivery to Sierra Nevada.;Aarons;Aeolian Res.,2019
2. A new procedure for separating and measuring radiogenic isotopes (U, Th, Pa, Ra, Sr, Nd, Hf) in ice cores.;Aciego;Chem. Geol.,2009
3. Dust outpaces bedrock in nutrient supply to montane forest ecosystems.;Aciego;Nat. Commun.,2017
4. A molecular approach to ascertain the success of in situ AM fungi inoculation in the revegetation of a semiarid, degraded land.;Alguacil;Sci. Total Environ.,2011
5. Ecology of mycorrhizae: a conceptual framework for complex interactions among plants and fungi.;Allen;Annu. Rev. Phytopathol.,2003
Cited by
1 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献