Authors
Kelly S Ramirez, Jonathan W Leff, Albert Barberán, Scott Thomas Bates, Jason Betley, Thomas W Crowther, Eugene F Kelly, Emily E Oldfield, E Ashley Shaw, Christopher Steenbock, Mark A Bradford, Diana H Wall, Noah Fierer
Publication date
2014/11/22
Journal
Proceedings of the royal society B: biological sciences
Volume
281
Issue
1795
Pages
20141988
Publisher
The Royal Society
Description
Soil biota play key roles in the functioning of terrestrial ecosystems, however, compared to our knowledge of above-ground plant and animal diversity, the biodiversity found in soils remains largely uncharacterized. Here, we present an assessment of soil biodiversity and biogeographic patterns across Central Park in New York City that spanned all three domains of life, demonstrating that even an urban, managed system harbours large amounts of undescribed soil biodiversity. Despite high variability across the Park, below-ground diversity patterns were predictable based on soil characteristics, with prokaryotic and eukaryotic communities exhibiting overlapping biogeographic patterns. Further, Central Park soils harboured nearly as many distinct soil microbial phylotypes and types of soil communities as we found in biomes across the globe (including arctic, tropical and desert soils). This integrated cross-domain …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
KS Ramirez, JW Leff, A Barberán, ST Bates, J Betley… - Proceedings of the royal society B: biological sciences, 2014