Kubartová Ariana, Moukoumi Judicaël, Béguiristain Thierry, Ranger Jacques, Berthelin Jacques
Department of Botany, Faculty of Sciences, Charles University, Benátská 2, 128 01, Praha 2, Czech Republic.
Microb Ecol. 2007 Oct;54(3):393-405. doi: 10.1007/s00248-007-9286-2. Epub 2007 Jul 4.
We studied the effect of forest tree species on a community of decomposers that colonize cellulose strips. Both fungal and bacterial communities were targeted in a native forest dominated by beech and oak and 30-year-old beech and spruce plantations, growing in similar ecological conditions in the Breuil-Chenue experimental forest site in Morvan (France). Microbial ingrowths from the 3rd to 10th month of strip decomposition (May to December 2004) were studied. Community composition was assessed using temperature gradient gel electrophoresis with universal fungal (ITS1F, ITS2) and bacterial (1401r, 968f) primers. Soil temperature and moisture as well as fungal biomass were also measured to give additional information on decomposition processes. Changing the dominant tree species had no significant influence in the number of decomposer species. However, decomposer community composition was clearly different. If compared to the native forest, where community composition highly differed, young monocultures displayed similar species structure for fungi and bacteria. Both species numbers and community composition evolved during the decay process. Time effect was found to be more important than tree species. Nevertheless, the actual environmental conditions and seasonal effect seemed to be even more determining factors for the development of microbial communities. The course and correlations of the explored variables often differed between tree species, although certain general trends were identified. Fungal biomass was high in summer, despite that species richness (SR) decreased and conversely, that high SR did not necessarily mean high biomass values. It can be concluded that the growth and development of the microbiological communities that colonized a model material in situ depended on the combination of physical and biological factors acting collectively and interdependently at the forest soil microsite.
我们研究了林木树种对定殖于纤维素条带的分解者群落的影响。在法国莫尔旺地区布勒伊 - 舍讷实验森林中,选取了以山毛榉和橡树为主的原生林以及树龄为30年的山毛榉和云杉人工林,这些森林生长在相似的生态条件下,研究了真菌和细菌群落。对2004年5月至12月纤维素条带分解第3个月至第10个月期间的微生物生长情况进行了研究。使用通用真菌引物(ITS1F、ITS2)和细菌引物(1401r、968f),通过温度梯度凝胶电泳评估群落组成。还测量了土壤温度、湿度以及真菌生物量,以获取有关分解过程的更多信息。改变优势树种对分解者物种数量没有显著影响。然而,分解者群落组成明显不同。与群落组成差异很大的原生林相比,年轻的单一树种林在真菌和细菌方面显示出相似的物种结构。物种数量和群落组成在腐烂过程中都发生了变化。发现时间效应比树种更重要。尽管如此,实际环境条件和季节效应似乎对微生物群落的发展更具决定性作用。尽管确定了某些总体趋势,但所探索变量的变化过程和相关性在不同树种之间往往有所不同。夏季真菌生物量较高,尽管物种丰富度下降,反之,高物种丰富度并不一定意味着高生物量值。可以得出结论,原位定殖于模型材料的微生物群落的生长和发育取决于森林土壤微位点上共同且相互依存作用的物理和生物因素的组合。