Diversity and functionality of soil prokaryotic communities in antarctic volcanic soils: insights from penguin-influenced environments
Diversity and functionality of soil prokaryotic communities in antarctic volcanic soils: insights from penguin-influenced environments
Authors
Segura, Diego
Jordaan, Karen
Diez, Beatriz
Tamayo Leiva, Javier
Doetterl, Sebastian
Wasner, Daniel
Cifuentes Anticevic, Jeronimo
Casanova Katny, Angelica
Jordaan, Karen
Diez, Beatriz
Tamayo Leiva, Javier
Doetterl, Sebastian
Wasner, Daniel
Cifuentes Anticevic, Jeronimo
Casanova Katny, Angelica
Profesor GuĆa
Authors
Date
Datos de publicaciĆ³n:
10.1007/s00300-024-03273-6
POLAR BIOLOGY,Vol.47,945-961,2024
POLAR BIOLOGY,Vol.47,945-961,2024
Tipo de recurso
Article
Keywords
Materia geogrƔfica
Collections
Abstract
In the nutrient-limited Antarctic terrestrial habitat, penguins transfer a significant amount of nutrients from the marine to the terrestrial ecosystem through their depositions (i.e., guano). This guano influences soil physicochemical properties, leading to the formation of ornithogenic soil rich in nutrients and organic matter. We hypothesize that soil prokaryotic communities will be strongly influenced by the contribution of nitrogenous nutrients from penguin rookeries, maintaining the influence over long distances. The objective was to establish how the soil prokaryotic diversity and community structure change with distance from a penguin colony, which provides large amounts of guano and nitrogenous compounds, and to study the effects of these nutrients on the functional role of these communities. Methods include volcanic soil sampling along a 1200 m transect from the penguin active rookery and the characterization of soil nutrient content and soil prokaryotic communities using 16S rRNA high-throughput amplicon sequencing. In contrast to our hypothesis, the results showed that the impact of guano from the penguin colony was restricted to the first 300 m. Probably because the penguin rookery was sheltered, strong wind and wind direction did not affect the transport of nutrients from the penguin rookery. Areas close to the penguin rookery were dominated by Proteobacteria and Bacteroidetes, while areas situated further away were dominated by Acidobacteria, Actinobacteria, Chloroflexi, Gemmatimonadetes, Nitrospirae, and Planctomycetes. Beta diversity analysis among the soil prokaryotic communities revealed a high degree of community heterogeneity, strongly associated with N compound characteristics (NH4, NO3, and %N), C, and pH. Inferences from N metabolism genes suggest a high potential of the microbial community for dissimilatory nitrate reduction genes (DNRA) to ammonium, assimilatory nitrate reduction (ANR), and denitrification. Although it is assumed that the nitrogenous compounds of the penguin colonies reach long distances and affect the prokaryotic community, this effect can vary with wind directions or the morphology of the site, reducing the impact of the guano over long distances, as our results indicate. On the other hand, functional predictions give some clues about the main actors in nitrogen cycling, through processes like dissimilatory nitrate reduction, assimilatory nitrate reduction, and denitrification.