How To Live with Phosphorus Scarcity in Soil and Sediment: Lessons from Bacteria.
Yunuen Tapia-TorresMaria Dolores Rodríguez-TorresJames J ElserAfrica IslasValeria SouzaFelipe García-OlivaGabriela Olmedo-ÁlvarezPublished in: Applied and environmental microbiology (2016)
Phosphorus (P) is an essential element for life found in molecules, such as DNA, cell walls, and in molecules for energy transfer, such as ATP. The Valley of Cuatro Ciénegas, Coahuila (Mexico), is a unique desert characterized by an extreme limitation of P and a great diversity of microbial life. How do bacteria in this valley manage to obtain P? We measured the availability of P and the enzymatic activity associated with P release in soil and sediment. Our results revealed that soil and sediment bacteria can break down and use P forms in different oxidation states and contribute to ecosystem P cycling. Even genetically related bacterial isolates exhibited different preferences for molecules, such as DNA, calcium phosphate, phosphite, and phosphonates, as substrates to obtain P, evidencing a distribution of roles for P utilization and suggesting a dynamic movement of P utilization traits among bacteria in microbial communities.