Cyanobacterial community composition and their functional shifts associated with biocrust succession in the Gurbantunggut Desert
- Author:
- Lan S., Thomas A.D., Rakes J.B., Garcia-Pichel F., Wu L. & Hu C.
- Year:
- 2021
- Journal:
- Environmental Microbiology Reports
- Pages:
- 13(6): 884–898
- Url:
- https://doi.org/10.1111/1758-2229.13011
Cyanobacteria, as key biocrust components, provide
a variety of ecosystem functions in drylands. In this
study, to identify whether a cyanobacterial community
shift is involved in biocrust succession and
whether this is linked to altered ecological functions,
we investigated cyanobacterial composition, total
carbon and nitrogen contents of biocrusts in the
Gurbantunggut Desert. Our findings showed that the
biocrust cyanobacteria in the Gurbantunggut desert
were mostly filamentous, coexisting with abundant
unicellular colonial Chroococcidiopsis. Heterocystous
Nostoc, Scytonema and Tolypothrix always represented
the majority of biocrust nitrogen-fixing
organisms, comprising an average of 92% of the nifH
gene reads. Community analysis showed a clear shift
in prokaryotic community composition associated
with biocrust succession from cyanobacteria- to
lichen- and moss-dominated biocrusts, and filamentous
non-nitrogen-fixing cyanobacteria-dominated
communities were gradually replaced by nitrogenfixing
and unicellular colonial communities. Along
the succession, there were concomitant reductions
in cyanobacterial relative abundance, whereas Chl-a,
total carbon and nitrogen contents increased. Concurrently,
distinct carbon and nitrogen stores shifts
occurred, implying that the main ecological contribution
of cyanobacteria in biocrusts changes from
carbon- to nitrogen-fixation along with the succession.
Our results suggest that any activity that
reverses biocrust succession will influence
cyanobacterial community composition and eventually
lead to large reductions in soil carbon and nitrogen
stores.
- Id:
- 34003
- Submitter:
- zdenek
- Post_time:
- Tuesday, 21 December 2021 09:51

