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Effect of plant communities on bacterial and fungal communities in a Central European grassland

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    0587430 - MBÚ 2025 RIV GB eng J - Journal Article
    Lepinay, Clémentine - Větrovský, Tomáš - Chytrý, M. - Dřevojan, P. - Fajmon, K. - Cajthaml, Tomáš - Kohout, Petr - Baldrian, Petr
    Effect of plant communities on bacterial and fungal communities in a Central European grassland.
    Environmental Microbiome. Roč. 19, č. 1 (2024), č. článku 42. E-ISSN 2524-6372
    R&D Projects: GA ČR(CZ) GA21-17749S; GA MŠMT(CZ) EH22_008/0004635
    Institutional support: RVO:61388971
    Keywords : arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi * bile-karpaty-mts * soil carbon * temperate grasslands * microbial diversity * species richness * alpha diversity * loess plateau * productivity * nitrogen * Semi-natural grassland * Plant diversity * Fungal ITS * Bacterial 16S rRNA * Arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi
    OECD category: Microbiology
    Impact factor: 7.9, year: 2022
    Method of publishing: Open access
    https://environmentalmicrobiome.biomedcentral.com/articles/10.1186/s40793-024-00583-4

    Background Grasslands provide fundamental ecosystem services that are supported by their plant diversity. However, the importance of plant taxonomic diversity for the diversity of other taxa in grasslands remains poorly understood. Here, we studied the associations between plant communities, soil chemistry and soil microbiome in a wooded meadow of & Ccaron, ertoryje (White Carpathians, Czech Republic), a European hotspot of plant species diversity.Results High plant diversity was associated with treeless grassland areas with high primary productivity and high contents of soil nitrogen and organic carbon. In contrast, low plant diversity occurred in grasslands near solitary trees and forest edges. Fungal communities differed between low-diversity and high-diversity grasslands more strongly than bacterial communities, while the difference in arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi (AMF) depended on their location in soil versus plant roots. Compared to grasslands with low plant diversity, high-diversity plant communities had a higher diversity of fungi including soil AMF, a different fungal and soil AMF community composition and higher bacterial and soil AMF biomass. Root AMF composition differed only slightly between grasslands with low and high plant diversity. Trees dominated the belowground plant community in low-diversity grasslands, which influenced microbial diversity and composition.Conclusions The determinants of microbiome abundance and composition in grasslands are complex. Soil chemistry mainly influenced bacterial communities, while plant community type mainly affected fungal (including AMF) communities. Further studies on the functional roles of microbial communities are needed to understand plant-soil-microbe interactions and their involvement in grassland ecosystem services.
    Permanent Link: https://hdl.handle.net/11104/0354612

     
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    Lepinay Environmental Microbiome 2024.pdf01.2 MBAuthor’s postprintopen-access
     
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