Ecological Indicators (Oct 2023)
Abundance of microbial community genes encoding terminal proteins of the aerobic and denitrification respiratory chains as indicators of ecohydrologic gradients in a coastal temperate rainforest
Abstract
The persistence of soil organic carbon (SOC) is closely linked to the capacity of the soil microbial community to catalyze oxidative degradation of organic matter. This study uses a landscape-scale metagenomics approach to examine the relative abundances of genes encoding different terminal electron acceptors used for aerobic respiration and denitrification between soil microbial communities across an ecohydrologic gradient. The perhumid zone of the North Pacific coastal temperate rainforest serves as a template to test the associations between these differing respiratory pathways, soil conditions, and tree species biomass. We used the occurrence of reads in soil metagenomes as a proxy for the relative abundance of genes across the ecohydrologic gradient and identified distinct microbial fingerprints differentiating the driest (upland forest) and wettest (palustrine scrub-shrub and palustrine emergent wetland) ecosystem types. There was little gene-based differentiation between the ecosystem types at the wettest end of the ecohydrologic gradient - scrub-shrub wetland and emergent wetlands – while forested wetlands, which occur as gradient sites between upland forests and emergent wetlands on the landscape, were characterized by substantial metagenomic variability and, consequently, overlapped in their soil metagenome with the other ecosystem classes. Hydrology, as measured by groundwater depth was a predictor of O2 and N-oxide reductase abundances. High affinity O2 reductase genes were associated with wetter topographic positions, which has not been shown at the ecosystem scale, or in soils in-situ previously. N-oxide reductase genes were more associated with plant communities found at wetland sites but were not related to soil inorganic nitrogen, suggesting that nitrate supply may be limiting to denitrifiers ubiquitously across this gradient. Two plant species, Tsuga heterophylla (TSHE) and Pinus contorta spp. contorta (PICO), were more strongly correlated with O2-reductase and N-oxide reductase genes than site hydrology, respectively. This research represents a step toward fingerprinting the ecosystem microbiome using genes coding for specific terminal electron acceptors that control the fate of SOC and their ecohydrologic controls.