Abstract

Trees of temperate rainforests host a large biomass of epiphytic plants, which are associated with soils formed in the forest canopy. Falling of epiphytic material results in the transfer of carbon and nutrients from the canopy to the forest floor. This study provides the first characterization of bacterial communities in canopy soils enabled by high-depth environmental sequencing of 16S rRNA genes. Canopy soil included many of the same major taxonomic groups of Bacteria that are also found in ground soil, but canopy bacterial communities were lower in diversity and contained different operational taxonomic units. A field experiment was conducted with epiphytic material from six Acer macrophyllum trees in Olympic National Park, Washington, USA to document changes in the bacterial communities of soils associated with epiphytic material that falls to the forest floor. Bacterial diversity and composition of canopy soil was highly similar, but not identical, to adjacent ground soil two years after transfer to the forest floor, indicating that canopy bacteria are almost, but not completely, replaced by ground soil bacteria. Furthermore, soil associated with epiphytic material on branches that were severed from the host tree and suspended in the canopy contained altered bacterial communities that were distinct from those in canopy material moved to the forest floor. Therefore, the unique nature of canopy soil bacteria is determined in part by the host tree and not only by the physical environmental conditions associated with the canopy. Connection to the living tree appears to be a key feature of the canopy habitat. These results represent an initial survey of bacterial diversity of the canopy and provide a foundation upon which future studies can more fully investigate the ecological and evolutionary dynamics of these communities.

Highlights

  • The operational taxonomic units (OTUs) richness of bacterial communities of epiphytic material (EM) perched on branches that were moved to the forest floor was significantly greater than that of the original canopy samples and was indistinguishable from the richness of ground soil samples

  • The origin and fate of canopy epiphytic material is of central importance to understanding the microbial ecology of temperate rainforests

  • Our results provide the first in-depth survey of bacterial communities in canopy soils and reveal them to be taxonomically similar to underlying ground soil but much lower in diversity

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Summary

Introduction

Temperate wet forests support a large biomass and high diversity of epiphytic plants (Van Pelt et al, 2006; Tejo, Zabowski & Nadkarni, 2015; Haristoy, Zabowski & Nadkarni, 2014; Nadkarni, 1984b; Nadkarni, 1984a; Ellyson & Sillett, 2003) that are accompanied by extensive accumulations of organic canopy soils up to 30 cm thick (Haristoy, Zabowski & Nadkarni, 2014). Single trees can support over 6.5 t dry weight of live and dead epiphytic material (EM), nearly four times the foliar biomass of host trees (Nadkarni, 1984a). These canopy communities play important ecological roles in ecosystem processes, in whole-forest nutrient cycles. Canopy soils develop from the accumulation and decomposition of EM on branches and in bifurcations of trees (Pérez et al, 2005; Nadkarni & Solano, 2002; Enloe & Graham, 2006). EM creates habitat for birds, invertebrates, and arboreal mammals (Nadkarni, 1981; Coxson & Nadkarni, 1995; Pypker & Unsworth, 2006; Wolf, 2005)

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