1. Flooding Duration Affects the Structure of Terrestrial and Aquatic Microbial Eukaryotic Communities
- Author
-
Jens Boenigk, Nadine Graupner, Moritz Mittelbach, Derek Peršoh, Martin Kemler, Dominik Begerow, and Oliver Röhl
- Subjects
0106 biological sciences ,0301 basic medicine ,Operational taxonomic unit ,Climate Change ,Soil Science ,Climate change ,Biology ,010603 evolutionary biology ,01 natural sciences ,Mesocosm ,Soil ,03 medical and health sciences ,Chlorides ,Microbial ecology ,Ammonium Compounds ,parasitic diseases ,Ecosystem ,Phylogeny ,Soil Microbiology ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Abiotic component ,Ecology ,Microbiota ,fungi ,Flooding (psychology) ,Community structure ,Eukaryota ,Genes, rRNA ,Biodiversity ,DNA ,Floods ,030104 developmental biology ,Habitat ,Water Microbiology ,Biologie - Abstract
The increasing number and duration of inundations is reported to be a consequence of climate change and may severely compromise non-adapted macroorganisms. The effect of flooding events on terrestrial and aquatic microbial communities is, however, less well understood. They may respond to the changed abiotic properties of their native habitat, and the native community may change due to the introduction of alien species. We designed an experiment to investigate the effect of five different flooding durations on the terrestrial and aquatic communities of eukaryotic microorganism, using the AquaFlow mesocosms. With amplicon sequencing of the small subunit (SSU) and internal transcribed spacer (ITS) rRNA gene regions, we analyzed community compositions directly before and after flooding. Subsequently, they were monitored for another 28 days, to determine the sustainability of community changes. Our results revealed a temporary increase in similarity between terrestrial and aquatic communities according to OTU composition (operational taxonomic unit, serves as a proxy for species). Increased similarity was mainly caused by the transmission of OTUs from water to soil. A minority of these were able to persist in soil until the end of the experiment. By contrast, the vast majority of soil OTUs was not transmitted to water. Flooding duration affected the community structure (abundance) more than composition (occurrence). Terrestrial communities responded immediately to flooding and the flooding duration influenced the community changes. Independent from flooding duration, all terrestrial communities recovered largely after flooding, indicating a remarkable resilience to the applied disturbances. Aquatic communities responded immediately to the applied inundations too. At the end of the experiment, they grouped according to the applied flooding duration and the amount of ammonium and chloride that leached from the soil. This indicates a sustained long-term response of the aquatic communities to flooding events.
- Published
- 2017