PLoS ONE (Jan 2013)

Different land use intensities in grassland ecosystems drive ecology of microbial communities involved in nitrogen turnover in soil.

  • Annabel Meyer,
  • Andreas Focks,
  • Viviane Radl,
  • Daniel Keil,
  • Gerhard Welzl,
  • Ingo Schöning,
  • Steffen Boch,
  • Sven Marhan,
  • Ellen Kandeler,
  • Michael Schloter

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0073536
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 8, no. 9
p. e73536

Abstract

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Understanding factors driving the ecology of N cycling microbial communities is of central importance for sustainable land use. In this study we report changes of abundance of denitrifiers, nitrifiers and nitrogen-fixing microorganisms (based on qPCR data for selected functional genes) in response to different land use intensity levels and the consequences for potential turnover rates. We investigated selected grassland sites being comparable with respect to soil type and climatic conditions, which have been continuously treated for many years as intensely used meadows (IM), intensely used mown pastures (IP) and extensively used pastures (EP), respectively. The obtained data were linked to above ground biodiversity pattern as well as water extractable fractions of nitrogen and carbon in soil. Shifts in land use intensity changed plant community composition from systems dominated by s-strategists in extensive managed grasslands to c-strategist dominated communities in intensive managed grasslands. Along the different types of land use intensity, the availability of inorganic nitrogen regulated the abundance of bacterial and archaeal ammonia oxidizers. In contrast, the amount of dissolved organic nitrogen determined the abundance of denitrifiers (nirS and nirK). The high abundance of nifH carrying bacteria at intensive managed sites gave evidence that the amounts of substrates as energy source outcompete the high availability of inorganic nitrogen in these sites. Overall, we revealed that abundance and function of microorganisms involved in key processes of inorganic N cycling (nitrification, denitrification and N fixation) might be independently regulated by different abiotic and biotic factors in response to land use intensity.