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Blackwood, CB; Waldrop, MP; Zak, DR; Sinsabaugh, RL. 2007. Molecular analysis of fungal communities and laccase genes in decomposing litter reveals differences among forest types but no impact of nitrogen deposition. ENVIRONMENTAL MICROBIOLOGY. 9(5):1306-1316.
Address:
Blackwood, CB, Kent State Univ, Dept Biol Sci, Kent, OH 44242
The fungal community of the forest floor was examined as the cause of
previously reported increases in soil organic matter due to
experimental N deposition in ecosystems producing predominantly
high-lignin litter, and the opposite response in ecosystems producing
low-lignin litter. The mechanism proposed to explain this phenomenon
was that white-rot basidiomycetes are more important in the degradation
of high-lignin litter than of low-lignin litter, and that their
activity is suppressed by N deposition. We found that forest floor mass
in the low-lignin sugar-maple dominated system decreased in October due
to experimental N deposition, whereas forest floor mass of high-lignin
oak-dominated ecosystems was unaffected by N deposition. Increased
relative abundance of basidiomycetes in high-lignin forest floor was
confirmed by denaturing gradient gel electrophoresis (DGGE) and
sequencing. Abundance of basidiomycete laccase genes, encoding an
enzyme used by white-rot basidiomycetes in the degradation of lignin,
was 5-10 times greater in high-lignin forest floor than in low-lignin
forest floor. While the differences between the fungal communities in
different ecosystems were consistent with the proposed mechanism, no
significant effects of N deposition were detected on DGGE profiles,
laccase gene abundance, laccase length heterogeneity profiles, or
phenol oxidase activity. Our observations indicate that the previously
detected accumulation of soil organic matter in the high-lignin system
may be driven by effects of N deposition on organisms in the mineral
soil, rather than on organisms residing in the forest floor. However,
studies of in situ gene expression and temporal and spatial variability
within forest floor communities will be necessary to further relate the
ecosystem dynamics of organic carbon to microbial communities and
atmospheric N deposition.
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