Soil microbial communities hold sway over numerous processes upon which we depend, driving the cycling of elements which sustain life, but also compromising food security and human health. Understanding the mechanisms driving existing soil microbial community diversity and function across disparate climates and ecological communities is key in order to determine future ecosystem responses to global change. Although studies aiming to characterise soil microbes are increasing in their scope, they will only capture the multifaceted interaction between diverse microbial communities if they measure the effects of above ground plant communities and the abiotic environment, when measured at appropriate scales across landscapes.
The proposed MICOCO project will address these shortfalls to achieve the following objectives:
[1] Determine the relative contribution of above ground plant community and soil abiotic conditions to SMC diversity and composition;
[2] Determine how climate influences microbial community turnover at varying spatial scales;
[3] Reveal the relative effects of microclimate, microbe-microbe associations, and microbe-plant associations on microbial function.