AI Article Synopsis

  • Soil pH influences bacterial diversity and community composition, with significant changes observed in response to varying pH levels across northern forests.
  • Acidic soils (pH ~3.8) favored taxa like Alphaproteobacteria and Acidobacteria, while overall bacterial richness peaked at intermediate pH levels; community assembly processes varied based on soil acidity.
  • Despite expectations around genes related to acid tolerance in acidic soils, genes linked to genetic information processing showed stronger selection, indicating complex interactions between soil pH and bacterial adaptations.

Article Abstract

Soil pH has shown to predict bacterial diversity, but mechanisms are still poorly understood. To investigate how bacteria distribute themselves as a function of soil pH, we assessed community composition, diversity, assembly, and gene abundance across local (ca. 1 km) scale gradients in soil pH from ~ 3.8 to 6.5 created by differences in soil parent material in three northern forests. Plant species were the same on all sites, with no evidence of agriculture in the past. Concentrations of extractable calcium, iron, and phosphorus also varied significantly across the pH gradients. Among taxa, Alphaproteobacteria and Acidobacteria were more common in soils with acidic pH values. Overall richness and diversity of OTUs peaked at intermediate pH values. Variations in OTU richness and diversity also had a quadratic fit with concentrations of extractable calcium and phosphorus. Community assembly was via homogeneous deterministic processes in soils with acidic pH values, whereas stochastic processes dominated in soils with near-neutral pH values. Although we expected selection via genes for acid tolerance response in acidic soils, genes for genetic information processing were more selective. Taxa in higher pH soils had differential abundance of transporter genes, suggesting adaptation to acquire metabolic substrates from soils. Soil bacterial communities in northern forest soils are incredibly diverse, and we still have much to learn about how soil pH and co-varying soil parameters directly drive gene selection in this critical component of ecosystem structure.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00248-020-01613-7DOI Listing

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