Abstract

Soil archives are an important resource in agronomic and ecosystem sciences. If microbial communities could be reconstructed from archived soil DNA, as prehistoric plant communities are reconstructed via pollen data, soil archive resources would assume even greater value for reconstructing land-use history, forensic science, and biosphere modelling. Yet, the effects of long-term soil archival on the preservation of microbial DNA is still largely unknown. To address this, we assessed the capacity of high-throughput sequencing (Illumina MiSeq) of ITS (internal transcribed spacer) and prokaryotic 16S rRNA genes for reconstructing soil microbial communities across a 20 years time-series. We studied air-dried soil archives and fresh soil samples taken from Populus bioenergy and deciduous forest research plots at the Kellogg Biological Station. Habitat and archival time explained significant amounts of variation in soil microbial α- and β-diversity both in fungal and prokaryotic communities. We found that microbial richness, diversity, and abundance generally decreased with storage time, but varied between habitat and taxonomic groups. The high relative abundance of ectomycorrhizal species including Hebeloma and Cortinarius detected in older soil archives raises questions regarding traits such as long-term persistence and viability of ectomycorrhizal propagules in soils, with relevance to forest health and ecosystem succession. Talaromyces, Paecilomyces and Epicoccum spp. were detected in fresh and across 20-year-old archived soils and were also cultured from these soils demonstrating their long-term spore viability. In summary, we found that microbial DNA in air-dried soils archived over the past 20 years degraded with time, in a manner that differed between soil types and phylogenetic groups of microbes.

Highlights

  • Soil is a complex and diverse milieu consisting of a solid phase of minerals, organic matter, and microorganisms, as well as a porous matrix filled with gases and water [1]

  • Through this research we addressed the following questions: 1) How are fungal and prokaryotic diversity impacted by soil archival time and 2) how much variation is explained by soil storage time? 3) Which fungal and prokaryotic taxa are most resilient and sensitive to soil archiving? 4) Can molecular profiles of soil archives be useful in reconstructing land use history and management?

  • Our results demonstrate that soil samples preserved by air-drying and longtime soil archival can be used to identify differences in microbial communities along different temporal, spatial and organizational scales, as well as in response to soil traits and management [9,12,52]

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Summary

Introduction

Soil is a complex and diverse milieu consisting of a solid phase of minerals, organic matter, and microorganisms, as well as a porous matrix filled with gases and water [1]. Fungal and prokaryotic diversity in soil archives. S1-S16 Figs and S1 Table (S1 File), R scripts (S2 File), ITS and 16S otu_table.biom files (S3 and S4 Files), metadata files (S5 and S6 Files), representative sequences of fungal culture isolates (S7 File) are provided as Supporting Information files and are available on GitHub (https://github.com/Gian77/Scientific-Papers-RCode)

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