Schmidt S K, Reed Sasha C, Nemergut Diana R, Grandy A Stuart, Cleveland Cory C, Weintraub Michael N, Hill Andrew W, Costello Elizabeth K, Meyer A F, Neff J C, Martin A M
Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, University of Colorado, Boulder, CO 80309-0334, USA.
Proc Biol Sci. 2008 Dec 22;275(1653):2793-802. doi: 10.1098/rspb.2008.0808.
Global climate change has accelerated the pace of glacial retreat in high-latitude and high-elevation environments, exposing lands that remain devoid of vegetation for many years. The exposure of 'new' soil is particularly apparent at high elevations (5000 metres above sea level) in the Peruvian Andes, where extreme environmental conditions hinder plant colonization. Nonetheless, these seemingly barren soils contain a diverse microbial community; yet the biogeochemical role of micro-organisms at these extreme elevations remains unknown. Using biogeochemical and molecular techniques, we investigated the biological community structure and ecosystem functioning of the pre-plant stages of primary succession in soils along a high-Andean chronosequence. We found that recently glaciated soils were colonized by a diverse community of cyanobacteria during the first 4-5 years following glacial retreat. This significant increase in cyanobacterial diversity corresponded with equally dramatic increases in soil stability, heterotrophic microbial biomass, soil enzyme activity and the presence and abundance of photosynthetic and photoprotective pigments. Furthermore, we found that soil nitrogen-fixation rates increased almost two orders of magnitude during the first 4-5 years of succession, many years before the establishment of mosses, lichens or vascular plants. Carbon analyses (pyrolysis-gas chromatography/mass spectroscopy) of soil organic matter suggested that soil carbon along the chronosequence was of microbial origin. This indicates that inputs of nutrients and organic matter during early ecosystem development at these sites are dominated by microbial carbon and nitrogen fixation. Overall, our results indicate that photosynthetic and nitrogen-fixing bacteria play important roles in acquiring nutrients and facilitating ecological succession in soils near some of the highest elevation receding glaciers on the Earth.
全球气候变化加快了高纬度和高海拔地区冰川消退的速度,使许多年都没有植被的土地暴露出来。在秘鲁安第斯山脉的高海拔地区(海拔5000米以上),“新”土壤的暴露尤为明显,那里极端的环境条件阻碍了植物的定殖。尽管如此,这些看似贫瘠的土壤中却含有多样的微生物群落;然而,微生物在这些极端海拔地区的生物地球化学作用仍然未知。我们运用生物地球化学和分子技术,沿着安第斯山脉的一个年代序列,研究了土壤中初级演替前期植物阶段的生物群落结构和生态系统功能。我们发现,在冰川消退后的最初4 - 5年里,新近冰川消退的土壤被各种各样的蓝细菌群落定殖。蓝细菌多样性的显著增加与土壤稳定性、异养微生物生物量、土壤酶活性以及光合和光保护色素的存在与丰度同样显著的增加相对应。此外,我们发现,在演替的最初4 - 5年里,土壤固氮率增加了近两个数量级,这比苔藓、地衣或维管植物的建立要早很多年。对土壤有机质的碳分析(热解气相色谱/质谱)表明,沿着年代序列的土壤碳源自微生物。这表明在这些地点早期生态系统发育过程中,养分和有机质的输入主要由微生物碳和氮固定作用主导。总体而言,我们的研究结果表明,光合细菌和固氮细菌在获取养分以及促进地球上一些海拔最高的消退冰川附近土壤的生态演替过程中发挥着重要作用。