Heterotrophic microbial communities use ancient carbon following glacial retreat

Author:

Bardgett Richard D1,Richter Andreas2,Bol Roland3,Garnett Mark H4,Bäumler Rupert5,Xu Xingliang2,Lopez-Capel Elisa6,Manning David A.C6,Hobbs Phil J3,Hartley Ian R1,Wanek Wolfgang2

Affiliation:

1. Institute of Environmental and Natural Sciences, Lancaster UniversityLancaster LA1 4YQ, UK

2. Department of Chemical Ecology and Ecosystem Research, University of Vienna1090 Wien, Austria

3. Institute of Grassland and Environmental Research, North WykeOkehampton, Devon EX20 2SB, UK

4. NERC Radiocarbon Laboratory, East KilbrideGlasgow G75 0QF, UK

5. Institute of Geography, University of ErlangenNürnberg, Kochstrasse 4/4, 91054 Erlangen, Germany

6. School of Civil Engineering and Geoscience, University of NewcastleNewcastle-upon-Tyne NE1 7RU, UK

Abstract

When glaciers retreat they expose barren substrates that become colonized by organisms, beginning the process of primary succession. Recent studies reveal that heterotrophic microbial communities occur in newly exposed glacial substrates before autotrophic succession begins. This raises questions about how heterotrophic microbial communities function in the absence of carbon inputs from autotrophs. We measured patterns of soil organic matter development and changes in microbial community composition and carbon use along a 150-year chronosequence of a retreating glacier in the Austrian Alps. We found that soil microbial communities of recently deglaciated terrain differed markedly from those of later successional stages, being of lower biomass and higher abundance of bacteria relative to fungi. Moreover, we found that these initial microbial communities used ancient and recalcitrant carbon as an energy source, along with modern carbon. Only after more than 50 years of organic matter accumulation did the soil microbial community change to one supported primarily by modern carbon, most likely from recent plant production. Our findings suggest the existence of an initial stage of heterotrophic microbial community development that precedes autotrophic community assembly and is sustained, in part, by ancient carbon.

Publisher

The Royal Society

Subject

General Agricultural and Biological Sciences,Agricultural and Biological Sciences (miscellaneous)

Reference16 articles.

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