The Influence of Permafrost Soil Structure on Microbial Community Diversity and Abundance

Soil structure plays a critical role in shaping soil microbial communities, who directly influence biogeochemical cycling1–4. Although well-studied in temperate systems, the importance of physical structure on soil microbial community diversity, function, and overall activity in permafrost soils is...

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Main Author: blais, nathan D
Format: Text
Language:unknown
Published: University of New Hampshire Scholars' Repository 2022
Subjects:
Ice
Online Access:https://scholars.unh.edu/thesis/1639
https://scholars.unh.edu/context/thesis/article/2679/viewcontent/blais_unh_0141N_11465.pdf
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spelling ftuninhampshire:oai:scholars.unh.edu:thesis-2679 2023-06-11T04:12:32+02:00 The Influence of Permafrost Soil Structure on Microbial Community Diversity and Abundance blais, nathan D 2022-12-01T08:00:00Z application/pdf https://scholars.unh.edu/thesis/1639 https://scholars.unh.edu/context/thesis/article/2679/viewcontent/blais_unh_0141N_11465.pdf unknown University of New Hampshire Scholars' Repository https://scholars.unh.edu/thesis/1639 https://scholars.unh.edu/context/thesis/article/2679/viewcontent/blais_unh_0141N_11465.pdf Master's Theses and Capstones text 2022 ftuninhampshire 2023-04-27T17:34:49Z Soil structure plays a critical role in shaping soil microbial communities, who directly influence biogeochemical cycling1–4. Although well-studied in temperate systems, the importance of physical structure on soil microbial community diversity, function, and overall activity in permafrost soils is largely unknown. I hypothesized that (1) decreases in pore connectivity would increase microbial diversity based on an expected inverse relationship between diversity and connectivity; (2) soil with an increased abundance of larger pores (> 75 µm), which are uninhabitable because they are too large to sustain liquid water, will exhibit lower bacterial and archaeal abundance and (3) the surface area of ice inclusions, which represents potentially habitable space in the form of brine channels, will be positively correlated with the abundance of active microbes. To test these hypotheses, I analyzed eight permafrost cores from three distinct sites in Alaska. Fine scale heterogeneity in soil physical and biological characteristics was captured from triplicate subsamples per core. To quantify soil ice inclusions and pore architecture, I scanned permafrost at -10 ºC using X-ray Computed Tomography to maintain its structure. Following scanning, both DNA and RNA were extracted from the permafrost and analyzed via amplicon sequencing and quantitative PCR of the 16S region. I analyzed the total and active microbial community diversity, and abundance. I found that at a scanning resolution of 20 µm only macro-scale features (>75 µm) could be quantified. Despite the limitation to the resolution, permafrost soil appears to share characteristics with temperate soils like the dominant pore size class (75-100 µm) and the positive relationship between total porosity and pore connectivity. I also found a negative relationship between macroporosity and microbial diversity, indicating that dispersal limitation in permafrost and past soil conditions may contribute to the spatial structure of microbial community diversity currently ... Text Ice permafrost Alaska University of New Hampshire: Scholars Repository
institution Open Polar
collection University of New Hampshire: Scholars Repository
op_collection_id ftuninhampshire
language unknown
description Soil structure plays a critical role in shaping soil microbial communities, who directly influence biogeochemical cycling1–4. Although well-studied in temperate systems, the importance of physical structure on soil microbial community diversity, function, and overall activity in permafrost soils is largely unknown. I hypothesized that (1) decreases in pore connectivity would increase microbial diversity based on an expected inverse relationship between diversity and connectivity; (2) soil with an increased abundance of larger pores (> 75 µm), which are uninhabitable because they are too large to sustain liquid water, will exhibit lower bacterial and archaeal abundance and (3) the surface area of ice inclusions, which represents potentially habitable space in the form of brine channels, will be positively correlated with the abundance of active microbes. To test these hypotheses, I analyzed eight permafrost cores from three distinct sites in Alaska. Fine scale heterogeneity in soil physical and biological characteristics was captured from triplicate subsamples per core. To quantify soil ice inclusions and pore architecture, I scanned permafrost at -10 ºC using X-ray Computed Tomography to maintain its structure. Following scanning, both DNA and RNA were extracted from the permafrost and analyzed via amplicon sequencing and quantitative PCR of the 16S region. I analyzed the total and active microbial community diversity, and abundance. I found that at a scanning resolution of 20 µm only macro-scale features (>75 µm) could be quantified. Despite the limitation to the resolution, permafrost soil appears to share characteristics with temperate soils like the dominant pore size class (75-100 µm) and the positive relationship between total porosity and pore connectivity. I also found a negative relationship between macroporosity and microbial diversity, indicating that dispersal limitation in permafrost and past soil conditions may contribute to the spatial structure of microbial community diversity currently ...
format Text
author blais, nathan D
spellingShingle blais, nathan D
The Influence of Permafrost Soil Structure on Microbial Community Diversity and Abundance
author_facet blais, nathan D
author_sort blais, nathan D
title The Influence of Permafrost Soil Structure on Microbial Community Diversity and Abundance
title_short The Influence of Permafrost Soil Structure on Microbial Community Diversity and Abundance
title_full The Influence of Permafrost Soil Structure on Microbial Community Diversity and Abundance
title_fullStr The Influence of Permafrost Soil Structure on Microbial Community Diversity and Abundance
title_full_unstemmed The Influence of Permafrost Soil Structure on Microbial Community Diversity and Abundance
title_sort influence of permafrost soil structure on microbial community diversity and abundance
publisher University of New Hampshire Scholars' Repository
publishDate 2022
url https://scholars.unh.edu/thesis/1639
https://scholars.unh.edu/context/thesis/article/2679/viewcontent/blais_unh_0141N_11465.pdf
genre Ice
permafrost
Alaska
genre_facet Ice
permafrost
Alaska
op_source Master's Theses and Capstones
op_relation https://scholars.unh.edu/thesis/1639
https://scholars.unh.edu/context/thesis/article/2679/viewcontent/blais_unh_0141N_11465.pdf
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