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Soil Properties Correlate with Microbial Community Structure in Qatari Arid Soils.

Sini SkariahSara Abdul MajidAnthony G HayAnushree AcharyaNoora KanoRaghad Khalid Al-IshaqPaul de FigueiredoArum HanAdrian GuzmanSoha Roger DarghamSaad SameerGi Eun KimSabiha KhanPriyamvada PillaiAli A Sultan
Published in: Microbiology spectrum (2023)
This is the first detailed characterization of the microbiota and chemistry of different arid habitats from the State of Qatar. Analysis of bacterial 16S rRNA gene sequences showed that in aggregate, the dominant microbial phyla were Actinobacteria (32.3%), Proteobacteria (24.8%), Firmicutes (20.7%), Bacteroidetes (6.3%), and Chloroflexi (3.6%), though individual soils varied widely in the relative abundances of these and other phyla. Alpha diversity measured using feature richness (operational taxonomic units [OTUs]), Shannon's entropy, and Faith's phylogenetic diversity (PD) varied significantly between habitats ( P  = 0.016, P  = 0.016, and P  = 0.015, respectively). Sand, clay, and silt were significantly correlated with microbial diversity. Highly significant negative correlations were also seen at the class level between both classes Actinobacteria and Thermoleophilia (phylum Actinobacteria ) and total sodium ( R = -0.82 and P  = 0.001 and R = -0.86, P  = 0.000, respectively) and slowly available sodium ( R = -0.81 and P  = 0.001 and R = -0.8 and P  = 0.002, respectively). Additionally, class Actinobacteria also showed significant negative correlation with sodium/calcium ratio ( R = -0.81 and P  = 0.001). More work is needed to understand if there is a causal relationship between these soil chemical parameters and the relative abundances of these bacteria. IMPORTANCE Soil microbes perform a multitude of essential biological functions, including organic matter decomposition, nutrient cycling, and soil structure preservation. Qatar is one of the most hostile and fragile arid environments on earth and is expected to face a disproportionate impact of climate change in the coming years. Thus, it is critical to establish a baseline understanding of microbial community composition and to assess how soil edaphic factors correlate with microbial community composition in this region. Although some previous studies have quantified culturable microbes in specific Qatari habitats, this approach has serious limitations, as in environmental samples, approximately only 0.5% of cells are culturable. Hence, this method vastly underestimates natural diversity within these habitats. Our study is the first to systematically characterize the chemistry and total microbiota associated with different habitats present in the State of Qatar.
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