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A hitchhiker’s guide: estimates of microbial biomass and microbial gene abundance in soil

Biology and Fertility of Soils 2024 25 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 55 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Rainer Georg Joergensen, Rainer Georg Joergensen, Lukas Beule, Lukas Beule, Michael Hemkemeyer, Lukas Beule, Lukas Beule, Lukas Beule, Florian Wichern Lukas Beule, Janyl Iskakova, Zhyldyz Oskonbaeva, Pauline Sophie Rummel, Sanja Annabell Schwalb, Florian Wichern

Summary

This study analyzed 11 datasets covering over 765 soil samples to map the relationships between microbial biomass and gene abundance for bacteria, fungi, and archaea in agricultural, forest, and rangeland soils. Researchers found that soil pH and clay content significantly influenced these relationships, providing a practical guide for scientists estimating microbial communities using different measurement methods.

Abstract Information on microbial biomass carbon (MBC) is crucial to assess their stocks and role for plant nutrient release in soil. Next to fumigation-extraction, molecular methods are routinely used to estimate the contribution of fungi, bacteria, and archaea to the soil microbial community. However, more information on the links between these different indices would deepen the understanding of microbial processes. The current study is based on 11 datasets, which contain MBC and MBN data obtained by fumigation-extraction and information on bacterial, archaeal, and fungal gene abundance, totalling 765 data points from agricultural, forest, and rangeland soils. Some of these datasets additionally provide information on double-stranded deoxyribonucleic acid (dsDNA) and fungal ergosterol. MBC varied around the median of 206 µg g −1 soil. MBN followed with a median MB-C/N ratio of 4.1. Median microbial gene abundance declined from bacteria (96 × 10 8 ) to archaea (4.4 × 10 8 ) to fungi (1.8 × 10 8 ). The median ratio of MBC/dsDNA was 15.8 and that of bacteria/dsDNA was 5.8 × 10 8 µg −1 . The relationships between MBC and dsDNA as well as between bacterial gene abundance and dsDNA were both negatively affected by soil pH and positively by clay content. The median ergosterol/MBC and fungi/ergosterol ratios were 0.20% and 4.7 (n × 10 8 µg −1 ), respectively. The relationship between fungal gene abundance and ergosterol was negatively affected by soil pH and clay content. Our study suggests that combining fumigation-extraction with molecular tools allows more precise insights on the physiological interactions of soil microorganisms with their surrounding environment.

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