Pedogenic and microbial interrelation in initial soils under semiarid climate on James Ross Island, Antarctic Peninsula region

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Pedogenic and microbial interrelation in initial soils under semiarid climate on James Ross Island, Antarctic Peninsula region. / Meier, Lars A.; Krauze, Patryk; Prater, Isabel; Horn, Fabian; Schaefer, Carlos E.G.R.; Scholten, Thomas; Wagner, Dirk; Mueller, Carsten W.; Kühn, Peter.

In: Biogeosciences, Vol. 16, No. 12, 2019, p. 2481-2499.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Meier, LA, Krauze, P, Prater, I, Horn, F, Schaefer, CEGR, Scholten, T, Wagner, D, Mueller, CW & Kühn, P 2019, 'Pedogenic and microbial interrelation in initial soils under semiarid climate on James Ross Island, Antarctic Peninsula region', Biogeosciences, vol. 16, no. 12, pp. 2481-2499. https://doi.org/10.5194/bg-16-2481-2019

APA

Meier, L. A., Krauze, P., Prater, I., Horn, F., Schaefer, C. E. G. R., Scholten, T., Wagner, D., Mueller, C. W., & Kühn, P. (2019). Pedogenic and microbial interrelation in initial soils under semiarid climate on James Ross Island, Antarctic Peninsula region. Biogeosciences, 16(12), 2481-2499. https://doi.org/10.5194/bg-16-2481-2019

Vancouver

Meier LA, Krauze P, Prater I, Horn F, Schaefer CEGR, Scholten T et al. Pedogenic and microbial interrelation in initial soils under semiarid climate on James Ross Island, Antarctic Peninsula region. Biogeosciences. 2019;16(12):2481-2499. https://doi.org/10.5194/bg-16-2481-2019

Author

Meier, Lars A. ; Krauze, Patryk ; Prater, Isabel ; Horn, Fabian ; Schaefer, Carlos E.G.R. ; Scholten, Thomas ; Wagner, Dirk ; Mueller, Carsten W. ; Kühn, Peter. / Pedogenic and microbial interrelation in initial soils under semiarid climate on James Ross Island, Antarctic Peninsula region. In: Biogeosciences. 2019 ; Vol. 16, No. 12. pp. 2481-2499.

Bibtex

@article{7529ec689e274aa6af44333a87c79f83,
title = "Pedogenic and microbial interrelation in initial soils under semiarid climate on James Ross Island, Antarctic Peninsula region",
abstract = "James Ross Island (JRI) offers the exceptional opportunity to study microbial-driven pedogenesis without the influence of vascular plants or faunal activities (e.g., penguin rookeries). In this study, two soil profiles from JRI (one at Santa Martha Cove-SMC, and another at Brandy Bay-BB) were investigated, in order to gain information about the initial state of soil formation and its interplay with prokaryotic activity, by combining pedological, geochemical and microbiological methods. The soil profiles are similar with respect to topographic position and parent material but are spatially separated by an orographic barrier and therefore represent windward and leeward locations towards the mainly southwesterly winds. These different positions result in differences in electric conductivity of the soils caused by additional input of bases by sea spray at the windward site and opposing trends in the depth functions of soil pH and electric conductivity. Both soils are classified as Cryosols, dominated by bacterial taxa such as Actinobacteria, Proteobacteria, Acidobacteria, Gemmatimonadetes and Chloroflexi. A shift in the dominant taxa was observed below 20 cm in both soils as well as an increased abundance of multiple operational taxonomic units (OTUs) related to potential chemolithoautotrophic Acidiferrobacteraceae. This shift is coupled by a change in microstructure. While single/pellicular grain microstructure (SMC) and platy microstructure (BB) are dominant above 20 cm, lenticular microstructure is dominant below 20 cm in both soils. The change in microstructure is caused by frequent freeze-Thaw cycles and a relative high water content, and it goes along with a development of the pore spacing and is accompanied by a change in nutrient content. Multivariate statistics revealed the influence of soil parameters such as chloride, sulfate, calcium and organic carbon contents, grain size distribution and pedogenic oxide ratios on the overall microbial community structure and explained 49.9 % of its variation. The correlation of the pedogenic oxide ratios with the compositional distribution of microorganisms as well as the relative abundance certain microorganisms such as potentially chemolithotrophic Acidiferrobacteraceae-related OTUs could hint at an interplay between soil-forming processes and microorganisms.",
author = "Meier, {Lars A.} and Patryk Krauze and Isabel Prater and Fabian Horn and Schaefer, {Carlos E.G.R.} and Thomas Scholten and Dirk Wagner and Mueller, {Carsten W.} and Peter K{\"u}hn",
year = "2019",
doi = "10.5194/bg-16-2481-2019",
language = "English",
volume = "16",
pages = "2481--2499",
journal = "Biogeosciences",
issn = "1726-4170",
publisher = "Copernicus GmbH",
number = "12",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Pedogenic and microbial interrelation in initial soils under semiarid climate on James Ross Island, Antarctic Peninsula region

AU - Meier, Lars A.

AU - Krauze, Patryk

AU - Prater, Isabel

AU - Horn, Fabian

AU - Schaefer, Carlos E.G.R.

AU - Scholten, Thomas

AU - Wagner, Dirk

AU - Mueller, Carsten W.

AU - Kühn, Peter

PY - 2019

Y1 - 2019

N2 - James Ross Island (JRI) offers the exceptional opportunity to study microbial-driven pedogenesis without the influence of vascular plants or faunal activities (e.g., penguin rookeries). In this study, two soil profiles from JRI (one at Santa Martha Cove-SMC, and another at Brandy Bay-BB) were investigated, in order to gain information about the initial state of soil formation and its interplay with prokaryotic activity, by combining pedological, geochemical and microbiological methods. The soil profiles are similar with respect to topographic position and parent material but are spatially separated by an orographic barrier and therefore represent windward and leeward locations towards the mainly southwesterly winds. These different positions result in differences in electric conductivity of the soils caused by additional input of bases by sea spray at the windward site and opposing trends in the depth functions of soil pH and electric conductivity. Both soils are classified as Cryosols, dominated by bacterial taxa such as Actinobacteria, Proteobacteria, Acidobacteria, Gemmatimonadetes and Chloroflexi. A shift in the dominant taxa was observed below 20 cm in both soils as well as an increased abundance of multiple operational taxonomic units (OTUs) related to potential chemolithoautotrophic Acidiferrobacteraceae. This shift is coupled by a change in microstructure. While single/pellicular grain microstructure (SMC) and platy microstructure (BB) are dominant above 20 cm, lenticular microstructure is dominant below 20 cm in both soils. The change in microstructure is caused by frequent freeze-Thaw cycles and a relative high water content, and it goes along with a development of the pore spacing and is accompanied by a change in nutrient content. Multivariate statistics revealed the influence of soil parameters such as chloride, sulfate, calcium and organic carbon contents, grain size distribution and pedogenic oxide ratios on the overall microbial community structure and explained 49.9 % of its variation. The correlation of the pedogenic oxide ratios with the compositional distribution of microorganisms as well as the relative abundance certain microorganisms such as potentially chemolithotrophic Acidiferrobacteraceae-related OTUs could hint at an interplay between soil-forming processes and microorganisms.

AB - James Ross Island (JRI) offers the exceptional opportunity to study microbial-driven pedogenesis without the influence of vascular plants or faunal activities (e.g., penguin rookeries). In this study, two soil profiles from JRI (one at Santa Martha Cove-SMC, and another at Brandy Bay-BB) were investigated, in order to gain information about the initial state of soil formation and its interplay with prokaryotic activity, by combining pedological, geochemical and microbiological methods. The soil profiles are similar with respect to topographic position and parent material but are spatially separated by an orographic barrier and therefore represent windward and leeward locations towards the mainly southwesterly winds. These different positions result in differences in electric conductivity of the soils caused by additional input of bases by sea spray at the windward site and opposing trends in the depth functions of soil pH and electric conductivity. Both soils are classified as Cryosols, dominated by bacterial taxa such as Actinobacteria, Proteobacteria, Acidobacteria, Gemmatimonadetes and Chloroflexi. A shift in the dominant taxa was observed below 20 cm in both soils as well as an increased abundance of multiple operational taxonomic units (OTUs) related to potential chemolithoautotrophic Acidiferrobacteraceae. This shift is coupled by a change in microstructure. While single/pellicular grain microstructure (SMC) and platy microstructure (BB) are dominant above 20 cm, lenticular microstructure is dominant below 20 cm in both soils. The change in microstructure is caused by frequent freeze-Thaw cycles and a relative high water content, and it goes along with a development of the pore spacing and is accompanied by a change in nutrient content. Multivariate statistics revealed the influence of soil parameters such as chloride, sulfate, calcium and organic carbon contents, grain size distribution and pedogenic oxide ratios on the overall microbial community structure and explained 49.9 % of its variation. The correlation of the pedogenic oxide ratios with the compositional distribution of microorganisms as well as the relative abundance certain microorganisms such as potentially chemolithotrophic Acidiferrobacteraceae-related OTUs could hint at an interplay between soil-forming processes and microorganisms.

U2 - 10.5194/bg-16-2481-2019

DO - 10.5194/bg-16-2481-2019

M3 - Journal article

AN - SCOPUS:85067789300

VL - 16

SP - 2481

EP - 2499

JO - Biogeosciences

JF - Biogeosciences

SN - 1726-4170

IS - 12

ER -

ID: 238949143