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Safe-site effects on rhizosphere bacterial communities in a high-altitude alpine environment.

Sonia CiccazzoAlfonso EspositoEleonora RolliStefan ZerbeDaniele DaffonchioLorenzo Brusetti
Published in: BioMed research international (2014)
The rhizosphere effect on bacterial communities associated with three floristic communities (RW, FI, and M sites) which differed for the developmental stages was studied in a high-altitude alpine ecosystem. RW site was an early developmental stage, FI was an intermediate stage, M was a later more matured stage. The N and C contents in the soils confirmed a different developmental stage with a kind of gradient from the unvegetated bare soil (BS) site through RW, FI up to M site. The floristic communities were composed of 21 pioneer plants belonging to 14 species. Automated ribosomal intergenic spacer analysis showed different bacterial genetic structures per each floristic consortium which differed also from the BS site. When plants of the same species occurred within the same site, almost all their bacterial communities clustered together exhibiting a plant species effect. Unifrac significance value (P < 0.05) on 16S rRNA gene diversity revealed significant differences (P < 0.05) between BS site and the vegetated sites with a weak similarity to the RW site. The intermediate plant colonization stage FI did not differ significantly from the RW and the M vegetated sites. These results pointed out the effect of different floristic communities rhizospheres on their soil bacterial communities.
Keyphrases
  • high throughput
  • gene expression
  • deep learning
  • high resolution
  • heavy metals
  • copy number
  • plant growth
  • transcription factor
  • mass spectrometry
  • human health