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Differences in soil micro-eukaryotic communities over soil pH gradients are strongly driven by parasites and saprotrophs. / Dupont, A. Ö. C.; Griffiths, R. I.; Bell, T. et al.
In: Environmental Microbiology, Vol. 18, No. 6, 15.01.2016, p. 2010-2024.

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Dupont AÖC, Griffiths RI, Bell T, Bass D. Differences in soil micro-eukaryotic communities over soil pH gradients are strongly driven by parasites and saprotrophs. Environmental Microbiology. 2016 Jan 15;18(6):2010-2024. doi: 10.1111/1462-2920.13220

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Dupont, A. Ö. C. ; Griffiths, R. I. ; Bell, T. et al. / Differences in soil micro-eukaryotic communities over soil pH gradients are strongly driven by parasites and saprotrophs. In: Environmental Microbiology. 2016 ; Vol. 18, No. 6. pp. 2010-2024.

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TY - JOUR

T1 - Differences in soil micro-eukaryotic communities over soil pH gradients are strongly driven by parasites and saprotrophs

AU - Dupont, A. Ö. C.

AU - Griffiths, R. I.

AU - Bell, T.

AU - Bass, D.

N1 - https://doi.org/10.1111/1462-2920.13220

PY - 2016/1/15

Y1 - 2016/1/15

N2 - Summary A recent large-scale assessment of bacterial communities across a range of UK soil types showed that bacterial community structure was strongly determined by soil pH. We analysed a data set of eukaryotic 454 sequencing 18S rDNA from the surveyed samples and showed significant differences in eukaryotic assemblages according to pH class, mostly between low pH and higher pH soils. Soil eukaryote communities (per sample) differed most at the taxonomic rank approximating to order level. Taxonomies assigned with the Protist Ribosomal Reference and the Silva 119 databases were taxonomically inconsistent, mostly due to differing 18S annotations, although general structure and composition according to pH were coherent. A relatively small number of lineages, mostly putative parasitic protists and fungi, drive most differences between pH classes, with weaker contributions from bacterivores and autotrophs. Overall, soil parasites included a large diversity of alveolates, in particular apicomplexans. Phylogenetic analysis of alveolate lineages demonstrates a large diversity of unknown gregarines, novel perkinsids, coccidians, colpodellids and uncharacterized alveolates. Other novel and/or divergent lineages were revealed across the eukaryote tree of life. Our study provides an in-depth taxonomic evaluation of micro-eukaryotic diversity, and reveals novel lineages and insights into their relationships with environmental variables across soil gradients.

AB - Summary A recent large-scale assessment of bacterial communities across a range of UK soil types showed that bacterial community structure was strongly determined by soil pH. We analysed a data set of eukaryotic 454 sequencing 18S rDNA from the surveyed samples and showed significant differences in eukaryotic assemblages according to pH class, mostly between low pH and higher pH soils. Soil eukaryote communities (per sample) differed most at the taxonomic rank approximating to order level. Taxonomies assigned with the Protist Ribosomal Reference and the Silva 119 databases were taxonomically inconsistent, mostly due to differing 18S annotations, although general structure and composition according to pH were coherent. A relatively small number of lineages, mostly putative parasitic protists and fungi, drive most differences between pH classes, with weaker contributions from bacterivores and autotrophs. Overall, soil parasites included a large diversity of alveolates, in particular apicomplexans. Phylogenetic analysis of alveolate lineages demonstrates a large diversity of unknown gregarines, novel perkinsids, coccidians, colpodellids and uncharacterized alveolates. Other novel and/or divergent lineages were revealed across the eukaryote tree of life. Our study provides an in-depth taxonomic evaluation of micro-eukaryotic diversity, and reveals novel lineages and insights into their relationships with environmental variables across soil gradients.

U2 - 10.1111/1462-2920.13220

DO - 10.1111/1462-2920.13220

M3 - Article

VL - 18

SP - 2010

EP - 2024

JO - Environmental Microbiology

JF - Environmental Microbiology

SN - 1462-2912

IS - 6

ER -