Abstract

In this study we report the bacterial diversity of biological soil crusts (biocrusts) inhabiting polar desert soils at the northern land limit of the Arctic polar region (83° 05 N). Employing pyrosequencing of bacterial 16S rRNA genes this study demonstrated that these biocrusts harbor diverse bacterial communities, often as diverse as temperate latitude communities. The effect of wetting pulses on the composition of communities was also determined by collecting samples from soils outside and inside of permafrost water tracks, hill slope flow paths that drain permafrost-affected soils. The intermittent flow regime in the water tracks was correlated with altered relative abundance of phylum level taxonomic bins in the bacterial communities, but the alterations varied between individual sampling sites. Bacteria related to the Cyanobacteria and Acidobacteria demonstrated shifts in relative abundance based on their location either inside or outside of the water tracks. Among cyanobacterial sequences, the proportion of sequences belonging to the family Oscillatoriales consistently increased in relative abundance in the samples from inside the water tracks compared to those outside. Acidobacteria showed responses to wetting pulses in the water tracks, increasing in abundance at one site and decreasing at the other two sites. Subdivision 4 acidobacterial sequences tended to follow the trends in the total Acidobacteria relative abundance, suggesting these organisms were largely responsible for the changes observed in the Acidobacteria. Taken together, these data suggest that the bacterial communities of these high latitude polar biocrusts are diverse but do not show a consensus response to intermittent flow in water tracks over high Arctic permafrost.

Highlights

  • Polar soils underlain by permafrost display unique drainage patterns

  • Note that at the time of sampling two water tracks were drier than the soils outside the water tracks, and all of the soils were relatively moist as a result of the recent snow melting (Table 1)

  • Water content was positively correlated with carbon (r = 0.822, p = 0.044) and nitrogen (r = 0.912, p = 0.010), suggesting that the nutrient status of these soils is tied to the soil water status at the time of sampling, independent of whether or not the samples were taken from inside or outside of the water tracks

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Summary

Introduction

Polar soils underlain by permafrost display unique drainage patterns. One such pattern is the formation of water tracks. The pulsed water flow in these water tracks results in characteristic landscape deformations, soil moisture in the water tracks can vary widely and is tied to local environmental factors such as snow melt [5]. In this regard, the water tracks represent a micro-environment in which intermittent periods of water flow may foster localized changes in biological community structure and activity. Despite the importance of water tracks to polar hydrology and ecology, little is known regarding how bacterial communities vary due to the water pulses present in permafrost water tracks

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