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The Right Place at the Right Time: Seasonal Variation of Bacterial Communities in Arid Avicennia marina Soils in the Red Sea Is Specific to Its Position in the Intertidal

Frontiers in Ecology and Evolution 2022 10 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 35 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Natalie Prinz, Timothy Thomson, Joanne I. Ellis, Joanne I. Ellis, Eva Aylagas, Marco Fusi, Eva Aylagas, Marco Fusi, Natalie Prinz, Morgan Bennett‐Smith, Burton H. Jones Susana Carvalho, Eva Aylagas, Susana Carvalho, Susana Carvalho, Burton H. Jones

Summary

Researchers investigated seasonal and spatial variation in bacterial community composition in the soils of an arid Avicennia marina mangrove ecosystem in the Red Sea, finding that microbial communities shifted significantly between seasons and intertidal positions. Summer shrub-site communities differed most markedly from fringe and winter communities, with environmental factors driven by seasonal sea level fluctuations controlling alpha diversity patterns.

Mangrove forests play an important role in facilitating biogeochemical pathways and cycling acting as blue carbon sinks. These services are primarily regulated by the activity of the soil microbiome. However, there is still limited research into spatial and temporal variation patterns of bacterial community assemblages in mangrove soils. This study investigated important ecological scales of microprocesses that govern microbial communities in an arid mangrove ecosystem. Shifts in microbial community composition were influenced by fluctuations in environmental factors within the mangrove forests of the Red Sea influenced by seasonal changes in sea level. Notably, in summer microbial communities in shrub sites differed significantly from the fringe and the winter samples, with lower alpha diversity yet a higher dominance of specialized species capable of surviving in extreme conditions. The onset of dispersal limitation and heterogenous selection and the reduction of drift are likely the main forces shaping community assemblages. Specifically, in summer lower mean tidal levels eliminate tidal inundation creating a harsh high salinity and high temperature environment with no tidal connection thereby influencing the onset of dispersal limitation. An increased understanding of the spatial and temporal variation of bacterial communities is critical when assessing delivery of ecosystem services and their role in soil biogeochemical processes.

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