Authors
Noah Fierer, Jonathan W Leff, Byron J Adams, Uffe N Nielsen, Scott Thomas Bates, Christian L Lauber, Sarah Owens, Jack A Gilbert, Diana H Wall, J Gregory Caporaso
Publication date
2012/12/26
Journal
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
Volume
109
Issue
52
Pages
21390-21395
Publisher
National Academy of Sciences
Description
For centuries ecologists have studied how the diversity and functional traits of plant and animal communities vary across biomes. In contrast, we have only just begun exploring similar questions for soil microbial communities despite soil microbes being the dominant engines of biogeochemical cycles and a major pool of living biomass in terrestrial ecosystems. We used metagenomic sequencing to compare the composition and functional attributes of 16 soil microbial communities collected from cold deserts, hot deserts, forests, grasslands, and tundra. Those communities found in plant-free cold desert soils typically had the lowest levels of functional diversity (diversity of protein-coding gene categories) and the lowest levels of phylogenetic and taxonomic diversity. Across all soils, functional beta diversity was strongly correlated with taxonomic and phylogenetic beta diversity; the desert microbial communities were …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
N Fierer, JW Leff, BJ Adams, UN Nielsen, ST Bates… - Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2012