Ecosystem engineering
by a single species can have a cascading effect on many ecosystem processes.
While the impact of above-ground ecological engineers on soil chemical
properties has been studied, few studies have assessed their impact on the soil
microbial community, which is largely responsible for many ecosystem functions.
2. Utilizing a long-term experiment where birch was planted on heather moorland
20 years ago, the engineering impact of a single tree species (Betula
pubescens) on the soil microbial community was assessed using phospholipid
fatty acid (PLFA) analysis and fungal polymerase chain reaction–denaturing
gradient gel electrophoresis (PCR-DGGE). Changes in the soil microbial
community were then related to soil chemical and physical variables and tree
performance variables. 3. Under birch, total microbial biomass (total PLFA)
declined, species richness increased and the ratio of fungal: bacterial PLFA
declined. The fungal PLFA marker increased with increasing organic matter and
depth of the LFH and O soil horizons, characteristics associated with moorland
soils.
Bacterial PLFAs
increased with increasing birch canopy cover. The fungal community of the birch
plots was different from that in the heather plots and changes in the fungal
community composition were related to the size of the birch trees in the plots.
4. Changes in the soil microbial community were also related to changes in
mineralizable N. Mineralizable N was correlated with both decreasing total soil
microbial biomass and decreasing fungal: bacterial ratio. 5. The durability of
the engineering effects of birch was studied in a second experiment. Plots were
established in first-generation birch woodland that had developed on
Calluna-dominated moorland.
The plots were
cleared of birch and planted with heather. After 20 years, there was no
difference in the community composition of the PLFAs. In contrast, there were
significant differences in the fungal community composition as judged by DGGE
analysis, with the fungal community in the felled birch plots being similar to
the heather moorland. 6. Synthesis. This work demonstrates that addition of a
single tree species to heather moorland results in changes in below-ground soil
microbial communities and in nutrient cycling.
Reference: http://www.jstor.org/stable/27754348
Reference: http://www.jstor.org/stable/27754348
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