Authors
Johannes Rousk, Erland Bååth, Philip C Brookes, Christian L Lauber, Catherine Lozupone, J Gregory Caporaso, Rob Knight, Noah Fierer
Publication date
2010/10
Journal
The ISME journal
Volume
4
Issue
10
Pages
1340-1351
Publisher
Oxford University Press
Description
Soils collected across a long-term liming experiment (pH 4.0–8.3), in which variation in factors other than pH have been minimized, were used to investigate the direct influence of pH on the abundance and composition of the two major soil microbial taxa, fungi and bacteria. We hypothesized that bacterial communities would be more strongly influenced by pH than fungal communities. To determine the relative abundance of bacteria and fungi, we used quantitative PCR (qPCR), and to analyze the composition and diversity of the bacterial and fungal communities, we used a bar-coded pyrosequencing technique. Both the relative abundance and diversity of bacteria were positively related to pH, the latter nearly doubling between pH 4 and 8. In contrast, the relative abundance of fungi was unaffected by pH and fungal diversity was only weakly related with pH. The composition of the bacterial communities was …
Total citations
201120122013201420152016201720182019202020212022202320245888127148196239256294358433464460443225
Scholar articles