Plant succession and rhizosphere microbial communities in a recently deglaciated alpine terrain

2005 
Summary This study describes how early and late successional plant species affect soil microorganisms in alpine ecosystems. We quantify the relative importance of plant species and soil properties as determinants of belowground microbial communities. Sixteen plant species were selected from six successional stages (4–14–20–43–75–135 years) within the foreland of the Rotmoosferner glacier, Austria, and at one (reference) site outside the foreland. The size, composition and function of the communities of microorganism in the bulk soil and the rhizosphere were characterized by ninhydrin-reactive nitrogen, phospholipid fatty acids and enzyme activities ( β -glucosidase, β -xylosidase, N -acetyl- β -glucosaminidase, leucine aminopeptidase, acid phosphatase, sulphatase). The results show that the microbial data could be grouped according to early (up to 43 years) and late-colonizing plant species (75 or more years). In early succession, no plant species or soil age effect was detected on the microbial biomass, phospholipid fatty acids, or enzyme activity. The rhizosphere microbial community was similar to that in the bulk soil, which in turn was determined by the abiotic environmental conditions. In late succession, improved soil conditions probably mediated plant species effects on the belowground microbial community. The most pronounced rhizosphere effects were attributed to plant species of the 75- and 135-year-old sites. The microbial colonization (size, composition, activity) of the bulk soil predominantly followed changes in vegetation cover, plant life forms and soil organic matter. In summary, the observed successional pattern of the above- and belowground communities provides an example of the facilitation models of primary succession.
    • Correction
    • Source
    • Cite
    • Save
    • Machine Reading By IdeaReader
    40
    References
    102
    Citations
    NaN
    KQI
    []