Lladó Salvador, López-Mondéjar Rubén, Baldrian Petr
Laboratory of Environmental Microbiology, Institute of Microbiology of the CAS, Vestec, Czech Republic.
Laboratory of Environmental Microbiology, Institute of Microbiology of the CAS, Vestec, Czech Republic
Microbiol Mol Biol Rev. 2017 Apr 12;81(2). doi: 10.1128/MMBR.00063-16. Print 2017 Jun.
The ecology of forest soils is an important field of research due to the role of forests as carbon sinks. Consequently, a significant amount of information has been accumulated concerning their ecology, especially for temperate and boreal forests. Although most studies have focused on fungi, forest soil bacteria also play important roles in this environment. In forest soils, bacteria inhabit multiple habitats with specific properties, including bulk soil, rhizosphere, litter, and deadwood habitats, where their communities are shaped by nutrient availability and biotic interactions. Bacteria contribute to a range of essential soil processes involved in the cycling of carbon, nitrogen, and phosphorus. They take part in the decomposition of dead plant biomass and are highly important for the decomposition of dead fungal mycelia. In rhizospheres of forest trees, bacteria interact with plant roots and mycorrhizal fungi as commensalists or mycorrhiza helpers. Bacteria also mediate multiple critical steps in the nitrogen cycle, including N fixation. Bacterial communities in forest soils respond to the effects of global change, such as climate warming, increased levels of carbon dioxide, or anthropogenic nitrogen deposition. This response, however, often reflects the specificities of each studied forest ecosystem, and it is still impossible to fully incorporate bacteria into predictive models. The understanding of bacterial ecology in forest soils has advanced dramatically in recent years, but it is still incomplete. The exact extent of the contribution of bacteria to forest ecosystem processes will be recognized only in the future, when the activities of all soil community members are studied simultaneously.
由于森林作为碳汇的作用,森林土壤生态学是一个重要的研究领域。因此,已经积累了大量关于其生态学的信息,特别是对于温带和北方森林。尽管大多数研究都集中在真菌上,但森林土壤细菌在这种环境中也发挥着重要作用。在森林土壤中,细菌栖息在具有特定特性的多种生境中,包括土壤本体、根际、凋落物和枯木生境,在这些生境中,它们的群落受到养分可用性和生物相互作用的影响。细菌有助于参与碳、氮和磷循环的一系列基本土壤过程。它们参与死亡植物生物量的分解,对死亡真菌菌丝体的分解非常重要。在森林树木的根际中,细菌作为共生菌或菌根辅助菌与植物根系和菌根真菌相互作用。细菌还介导氮循环中的多个关键步骤,包括固氮。森林土壤中的细菌群落对全球变化的影响做出反应,如气候变暖、二氧化碳水平升高或人为氮沉降。然而,这种反应往往反映了每个研究的森林生态系统的特异性,并且仍然不可能将细菌完全纳入预测模型。近年来,对森林土壤中细菌生态学的理解有了显著进展,但仍然不完整。只有在未来同时研究所有土壤群落成员的活动时,才能认识到细菌对森林生态系统过程贡献的确切程度。