AI Article Synopsis

  • The Pampa biome is a biodiversity hotspot, but has experienced significant vegetation loss due to agriculture and plantations.
  • Researchers studied the impact of different land uses on soil bacterial communities in the Brazilian Pampa, hypothesizing that distinct land uses would lead to different bacterial compositions.
  • They discovered that while soil types under different land uses had similar bacterial communities, microbial activity did not align with the community composition, indicating that bacterial diversity and activity can operate independently.

Article Abstract

The Pampa biome is considered one of the main hotspots of the world's biodiversity and it is estimated that half of its original vegetation was removed and converted to agricultural land and tree plantations. Although an increasing amount of knowledge is being assembled regarding the response of soil bacterial communities to land use change, to the associated plant community and to soil properties, our understanding about how these interactions affect the microbial community from the Brazilian Pampa is still poor and incomplete. In this study, we hypothesized that the same soil type from the same geographic region but under distinct land use present dissimilar soil bacterial communities. To test this hypothesis, we assessed the soil bacterial communities from four land-uses within the same soil type by 454-pyrosequencing of 16S rRNA gene and by soil microbial activity analyzes. We found that the same soil type under different land uses harbor similar (but not equal) bacterial communities and the differences were controlled by many microbial taxa. No differences regarding diversity and richness between natural areas and areas under anthropogenic disturbance were detected. However, the measures of microbial activity did not converge with the 16S rRNA data supporting the idea that the coupling between functioning and composition of bacterial communities is not necessarily correlated.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3797755PMC
http://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0076465PLOS

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