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Predicting the responses of soil nitrite-oxidizers to multi-factorial global change: A trait-based approach

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Auteur
Le Roux X., Bouskill N.J., Niboyet A., Barthes L., Dijkstra P., Field C.B., Hungate B.A., Lerondelle C., Pommier T., Tang J., Terada A., Tourna M., Poly F.
Date
2016
Language
en
DOI
10.3389/fmicb.2016.00628
Sujet
carbon dioxide
nitrogen
ammonification
Article
biogeochemical cycling
biological trait
controlled study
DNA extraction
ecological niche
field experiment
global change
grassland
mixotroph
nitrite oxidizer
nitrite oxidizing bacterium
Nitrobacter
nonhuman
nucleotide sequence
oxidation
phylogenetic tree
phylogeny
population abundance
precipitation
prediction
soil microflora
soil respiration
United States
Frontiers Media S.A.
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Résumé
Soil microbial diversity is huge and a few grams of soil contain more bacterial taxa than there are bird species on Earth. This high diversity often makes predicting the responses of soil bacteria to environmental change intractable and restricts our capacity to predict the responses of soil functions to global change. Here, using a long-term field experiment in a California grassland, we studied the main and interactive effects of three global change factors (increased atmospheric CO2 concentration, precipitation and nitrogen addition, and all their factorial combinations, based on global change scenarios for central California) on the potential activity, abundance and dominant taxa of soil nitrite-oxidizing bacteria (NOB). Using a trait-based model, we then tested whether categorizing NOB into a few functional groups unified by physiological traits enables understanding and predicting how soil NOB respond to global environmental change. Contrasted responses to global change treatments were observed between three main NOB functional types. In particular, putatively mixotrophic Nitrobacter, rare under most treatments, became dominant under the 'High CO2+Nitrogen+Precipitation' treatment. The mechanistic trait-based model, which simulated ecological niches of NOB types consistent with previous ecophysiological reports, helped predicting the observed effects of global change on NOB and elucidating the underlying biotic and abiotic controls. Our results are a starting point for representing the overwhelming diversity of soil bacteria by a few functional types that can be incorporated into models of terrestrial ecosystems and biogeochemical processes. © 2016 Le Roux, Bouskill, Niboyet, Barthes, Dijkstra, Field, Hungate, Lerondelle, Pommier, Tang, Terada, Tourna and Poly.
URI
http://hdl.handle.net/11615/75731
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