Temporal variation in soil bacterial communities can be confounded with spatial variation

Author:

Hermans Syrie M1ORCID,Buckley Hannah L2,Curran-Cournane Fiona3,Taylor Matthew4,Lear Gavin1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. School of Biological Sciences, University of Auckland, 3A Symonds Street, Auckland 1010, New Zealand

2. School of Science, Auckland University of Technology, 34 St Paul Street, Auckland 1010, New Zealand

3. Ministry for the Environment—Manatū Mō Te Taiao, 45 Queen Street, Auckland 1010, New Zealand

4. Waikato Regional Council, 401 Grey Street, Hamilton 3216, New Zealand

Abstract

ABSTRACT Investigating temporal variation in soil bacterial communities advances our fundamental understanding of the causal processes driving biological variation, and how the composition of these important ecosystem members may change into the future. Despite this, temporal variation in soil bacteria remains understudied, and the effects of spatial heterogeneity in bacterial communities on the detection of temporal changes is largely unknown. Using 16S rRNA gene amplicon sequencing, we evaluated temporal patterns in soil bacterial communities from indigenous forest and human-impacted sites sampled repeatedly over a 5-year period. Temporal variation appeared to be greater when fewer spatial samples per site were analysed, as well as in human-impacted compared to indigenous sites (P < 0.01 for both). The biggest portion of variation in bacterial community richness and composition was explained by soil physicochemical variables (13–24%) rather than spatial distance or sampling time (<1%). These results highlight the importance of adequate spatiotemporal replication when sampling soil communities for environmental monitoring, and the importance of conducting temporal research across a wide variety of land uses. This will ensure we have a true understanding of how bacterial communities change over space and time; the work presented here provides important considerations for how such research should be designed.

Funder

New Zealand's Biological Heritage National Science Challenge

Ministry of Business, Innovation and Employment

University of Auckland

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology,Ecology,Microbiology

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