Patterns of Soil Bacteria and Canopy Community Structure Related to Tropical Peatland Development
Data(s) |
01/01/2012
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Resumo |
Natural environmental gradients provide important information about the ecological constraints on plant and microbial community structure. In a tropical peatland of Panama, we investigated community structure (forest canopy and soil bacteria) and microbial community function (soil enzyme activities and respiration) along an ecosystem development gradient that coincided with a natural P gradient. Highly structured plant and bacterial communities that correlated with gradients in phosphorus status and soil organic matter content characterized the peatland. A secondary gradient in soil porewater NH4 described significant variance in soil microbial respiration and β-1-4-glucosidase activity. Covariation of canopy and soil bacteria taxa contributed to a better understanding of ecological classifications for biotic communities with applicability for tropical peatland ecosystems of Central America. Moreover, plants and soils, linked primarily through increasing P deficiency, influenced strong patterning of plant and bacterial community structure related to the development of this tropical peatland ecosystem. |
Identificador |
https://digitalcommons.fiu.edu/fce_lter_journal_articles/256 |
Publicador |
FIU Digital Commons |
Direitos |
default |
Fonte |
FCE LTER Journal Articles |
Palavras-Chave | #Plant #Ombrotrophy #PCR-DGGE #Phosphorus #Wetland #Bacteria #Acidobacteria #Respiration #Enzyme activity #Forest #Bog #Ecology and Evolutionary Biology #Environmental Sciences |
Tipo |
text |