Periodic Reporting for period 2 - SoilResist (Diversity, stability and functioning of the soil microbiome)
Período documentado: 2022-12-01 hasta 2024-05-31
1. We completed a global-scale sampling campaign, based on NutNet, involving soil sampling from globally distributed grasslands to test microbial resistance and resilience to drought. Soils have been sampled from 32 sites, each with fertilised and unfertilised plots, and spanning 14 countries, 5 continents, and desert grassland to arctic tundra. A laboratory test of microbial resistance and resilience has been completed, yielding >1000 soil samples for microbial community analyses. This work will identify across global environmental gradients the dominant factors determining soil microbial resistance and resilience to drought, and how nutrient enrichment moderates microbial community resistance and resilience.
2. We have characterised a precipitation gradient in Navarra, Spain, spanning desert grassland to mesic grassland (400-2100 mm year). Soils have been sampled for microbial community analysis, and we will test in situ microbial community resistance and resilience using rain shelters, followed by laboratory testing of the vulnerability of microbiomes to shifts to alternative states. This will enable us to test whether increasing frequency and intensity of drought increases the vulnerability of soil microbial communities to state transitions, and whether thresholds for transitions are moderated by extrinsic attributes, especially climate history.
3. A mesocosm experiment has been set up in Manchester with contrasting plant communities and a nutrient enrichment treatment, to be exposed to a gradient of drought to detect thresholds in soil microbiome responses and shifts to alternative microbial states. This work is ongoing and will enable us to test our hypothesis that press perturbations (i.e. nutrient enrichment) weaken the resistance and resilience of soil microbial communities to drought and that response are moderated by vegetation.
4. We demonstrated experimentally that intense and frequent pulses of drought can induce an abrupt shift in the soil microbial community characterised by significantly altered bacterial and fungal community structures of reduced complexity and functionality. This work, involving collaborators in Sweden and in part supported by SoilResist, provides the first quantitative evidence that high intensity drought can induce an abrupt shift to an alternative microbial state with deleterious consequences for soil functioning, a key goal of SoilResist.