Abstract

Freshwater and soil habitats hold rich microbial communities. Here we address commonalities and differences between both habitat types. While freshwater and soil habitats differ considerably in habitat characteristics organismic exchange may be high and microbial communities may even be inoculated by organisms from the respective other habitat. We analyze diversity pattern and the overlap of taxa of eukaryotic microbial communities in freshwater and soil based on Illumina HiSeq high-throughput sequencing of the amplicon V9 diversity. We analyzed corresponding freshwater and soil samples from 30 locations, i.e. samples from different lakes across Germany and soil samples from the respective catchment areas. Aside from principle differences in the community composition of soils and freshwater, in particular with respect to the relative contribution of fungi and algae, soil habitats have a higher richness. Nevertheless, community similarity between different soil sites is considerably lower as compared to the similarity between different freshwater sites. We show that the overlap of organisms co-occurring in freshwater and soil habitats is surprisingly low. Even though closely related taxa occur in both habitats distinct OTUs were mostly habitat–specific and most OTUs occur exclusively in either soil or freshwater. The distribution pattern of the few co-occurring lineages indicates that even most of these are presumably rather habitat-specific. Their presence in both habitat types seems to be based on a stochastic drift of particularly abundant but habitat-specific taxa rather than on established populations in both types of habitats.

Highlights

  • Freshwater and soil habitats hold rich microbial communities

  • They fulfill important ecosystem f­unctions[1,2,3] channel bacterial secondary production from the microbial food web to higher trophic ­levels[4,5] thereby interacting indirectly and directly with other taxa such as f­ungi[6,7]. In aquatic habitats they are the dominant primary ­producers[8]. Constraints structuring their diversity differ fundamentally between both habitats: for instance, freshwater habitats are more homogeneous than soil habitats due to mixing of the water ­body[9,10], the availability of water in soils is constrained by e.g. evaporation and soil i­rrigation[11,12,13], and soils are more heterogeneous than aquatic habitats consisting of various m­ icrohabitats[14,15,16,17]

  • Community composition and richness strongly differed between soil and freshwater (Fig. 1)

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Summary

Introduction

Freshwater and soil habitats hold rich microbial communities. Here we address commonalities and differences between both habitat types. While freshwater and soil habitats differ considerably in habitat characteristics organismic exchange may be high and microbial communities may even be inoculated by organisms from the respective other habitat. Despite the central importance of protists and fungi at the basis of soil and aquatic food webs comparative analyses of protists and fungi community composition in soils and freshwaters are rare In both habitats protists are a very diverse and ubiquitously distributed group of organisms. Microbial organisms are differentially challenged by environmental factors of soil and freshwater h­ abitats[25,26,27,28] Their adaptations may systematically differ eventually leading to exclusive communities (at least in part) of soils and freshwaters. The dominant microbial eukaryotes differ considerably between different ­habitats[33,44,45,46], organisms considered as typical for aquatic environments may occur in soil (e.g. C­ hoanoflagellata47) and vice versa fungi (e.g. soil fungi occur on submerged m­ aterial[48])

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