Authors
Julie R Deslippe, Martin Hartmann, Suzanne W Simard, William W Mohn
Publication date
2012/11/1
Journal
FEMS microbiology ecology
Volume
82
Issue
2
Pages
303-315
Publisher
Blackwell Publishing Ltd
Description
Despite the importance of Arctic soils in the global carbon cycle, we know very little of the impacts of warming on the soil microbial communities that drive carbon and nutrient cycling in these ecosystems. Over a 2-year period, we monitored the structure of soil fungal and bacterial communities in organic and mineral soil horizons in plots warmed by greenhouses for 18 years and in control plots. We found that microbial communities were stable over time but strongly structured by warming. Warming led to significant reductions in the evenness of bacterial communities, while the evenness of fungal communities increased significantly. These patterns were strongest in the organic horizon, where temperature change was greatest and were associated with a significant increase in the dominance of the Actinobacteria and significant reductions in the Gemmatimonadaceae and the Proteobacteria. Greater evenness of …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
JR Deslippe, M Hartmann, SW Simard, WW Mohn - FEMS microbiology ecology, 2012