Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, University of Colorado, Boulder, CO 80309, USA. Department of Pediatrics, University of California, San Diego, San Diego, CA 92037, USA.
Department of Pediatrics, University of California, San Diego, San Diego, CA 92037, USA.
Science. 2016 Jan 8;351(6269):158-62. doi: 10.1126/science.aad2646. Epub 2015 Dec 10.
Vertebrate corpse decomposition provides an important stage in nutrient cycling in most terrestrial habitats, yet microbially mediated processes are poorly understood. Here we combine deep microbial community characterization, community-level metabolic reconstruction, and soil biogeochemical assessment to understand the principles governing microbial community assembly during decomposition of mouse and human corpses on different soil substrates. We find a suite of bacterial and fungal groups that contribute to nitrogen cycling and a reproducible network of decomposers that emerge on predictable time scales. Our results show that this decomposer community is derived primarily from bulk soil, but key decomposers are ubiquitous in low abundance. Soil type was not a dominant factor driving community development, and the process of decomposition is sufficiently reproducible to offer new opportunities for forensic investigations.
脊椎动物尸体的分解为大多数陆地生境中的养分循环提供了一个重要的阶段,但微生物介导的过程还知之甚少。在这里,我们结合了深度微生物群落特征描述、群落水平代谢重建和土壤生物地球化学评估,以了解在不同土壤基质上分解老鼠和人类尸体时控制微生物群落组装的原则。我们发现了一系列参与氮循环的细菌和真菌群,以及在可预测的时间尺度上出现的可重复的分解者网络。我们的结果表明,这个分解者群落主要来源于土壤基质,但关键的分解者在低丰度下普遍存在。土壤类型并不是驱动群落发展的主要因素,而且分解过程具有足够的可重复性,为法医学调查提供了新的机会。