Abstract

Ultramafic soils are colonised by plant communities adapted to naturally elevated heavy metal content but it is not known whether soil microbial communities are similarly adapted to heavy metals. We measured microbial properties of six ultramafic soils that ranged in heavy metal content to test whether microbial diversity would decrease and respiratory quotient (microbial respiration:biomass) increase due to the stress imposed by increasing metal content. Soil samples were collected from beneath Nothofagus solandri var. cliffortioides tall forest, tall Leptospermum scoparium shrubland, open Leptospermum scoparium shrubland, an open Leptospermum scoparium shrubland with the rare ultramafic endemic Celmisia spedenii, a mixed divaricate shrubland, and a red tussock (Chionochloa rubra) grassland on the Dun Mountain Ophiolite belt, New Zealand. Samples were analysed for catabolic evenness using the catabolic response profile technique, microbial biomass, microbial respiration, and soil properties (pH, total carbon, total nitrogen, magnesium and total or extractable chromium and nickel). The sites differed in base saturation, pH and concentrations of metals, particularly magnesium, chromium and nickel, properties that are a major determinant of the plant communities that develop. Microbial biomass and respiration, catabolic evenness (range of 19.1 to 22.7) and the respiratory quotient were not correlated to any of the measured soil chemical properties. Factor analysis of the respiratory responses showed that the microbial communities under each vegetation type were distinct. The second factor extracted was correlated to total carbon (r2=0.62, P<0.01), basal respiration (r2=0.55, P<0.01) and microbial biomass (r2=0.65, P<0.01). Increasing metals concentrations had no direct impact on microbial diversity, biomass, respiration or community energetics. However, we suggest that metal concentrations may have exerted an indirect effect on the structure of the microbial communities through control of the vegetation community and litter inputs of carbon to the soil.

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