基因组
生物
古细菌
物种丰富度
操作分类学单元
物种均匀度
土壤微生物学
生态学
微生物
细菌
核糖体RNA
微生物种群生物学
16S核糖体RNA
土壤水分
遗传学
基因
作者
Noah Fierer,Mya Breitbart,James Nulton,Peter Salamon,Catherine Lozupone,Ryan Jones,Michael S. Robeson,Robert A. Edwards,Ben Felts,Steve Rayhawk,Rob Knight,Forest Rohwer,Robert B. Jackson
摘要
ABSTRACT Recent studies have highlighted the surprising richness of soil bacterial communities; however, bacteria are not the only microorganisms found in soil. To our knowledge, no study has compared the diversities of the four major microbial taxa, i.e., bacteria, archaea, fungi, and viruses, from an individual soil sample. We used metagenomic and small-subunit RNA-based sequence analysis techniques to compare the estimated richness and evenness of these groups in prairie, desert, and rainforest soils. By grouping sequences at the 97% sequence similarity level (an operational taxonomic unit [OTU]), we found that the archaeal and fungal communities were consistently less even than the bacterial communities. Although total richness levels are difficult to estimate with a high degree of certainty, the estimated number of unique archaeal or fungal OTUs appears to rival or exceed the number of unique bacterial OTUs in each of the collected soils. In this first study to comprehensively survey viral communities using a metagenomic approach, we found that soil viruses are taxonomically diverse and distinct from the communities of viruses found in other environments that have been surveyed using a similar approach. Within each of the four microbial groups, we observed minimal taxonomic overlap between sites, suggesting that soil archaea, bacteria, fungi, and viruses are globally as well as locally diverse.
科研通智能强力驱动
Strongly Powered by AbleSci AI