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      Variations in culturable bacterial communities and biochemical properties in the foreland of the retreating Tianshan No. 1 glacier

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          Abstract

          As a glacier retreats, barren areas are exposed, and these barren areas are ideal sites to study microbial succession. In this study, we characterized the soil culturable bacterial communities and biochemical parameters of early successional soils from a receding glacier in the Tianshan Mountains. The total number of culturable bacteria ranged from 2.19 × 10 5 to 1.30 × 10 6 CFU g −1 dw and from 9.33 × 10 5 to 2.53 × 10 6 CFU g −1 dw at 4 °C and 25 °C, respectively. The number of culturable bacteria in the soil increased at 25 °C but decreased at 4 °C along the chronosequence. The total organic carbon, total nitrogen content, and enzymatic activity were relatively low in the glacier foreland. The number of culturable bacteria isolated at 25 °C was significantly positively correlated with the TOC and TN as well as the soil urease, protease, polyphenoloxidase, sucrase, catalase, and dehydrogenase activities. We obtained 358 isolates from the glacier foreland soils that clustered into 35 groups using amplified ribosomal DNA restriction analysis. These groups are affiliated with 20 genera that belong to six taxa, namely, Alphaproteobacteria, Betaproteobacteria, Gammaproteobacteria, Actinobacteria, Bacteroides, and Deinococcus-Thermus, with a predominance of members of Actinobacteria and Proteobacteria in all of the samples. A redundancy analysis showed that the bacterial succession was divided into three periods, an early stage (10a), a middle stage (25–74a), and a late stage (100–130a), with the total number of culturable bacteria mainly being affected by the soil enzymatic activity, suggesting that the microbial succession correlated with the soil age along the foreland.

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          The effects of long term nitrogen deposition on extracellular enzyme activity in an Acer saccharum forest soil

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            Ecoenzymatic stoichiometry of microbial organic nutrient acquisition in soil and sediment.

            Biota can be described in terms of elemental composition, expressed as an atomic ratio of carbon:nitrogen:phosphorus (refs 1-3). The elemental stoichiometry of microoorganisms is fundamental for understanding the production dynamics and biogeochemical cycles of ecosystems because microbial biomass is the trophic base of detrital food webs. Here we show that heterotrophic microbial communities of diverse composition from terrestrial soils and freshwater sediments share a common functional stoichiometry in relation to organic nutrient acquisition. The activities of four enzymes that catalyse the hydrolysis of assimilable products from the principal environmental sources of C, N and P show similar scaling relationships over several orders of magnitude, with a mean ratio for C:N:P activities near 1:1:1 in all habitats. We suggest that these ecoenzymatic ratios reflect the equilibria between the elemental composition of microbial biomass and detrital organic matter and the efficiencies of microbial nutrient assimilation and growth. Because ecoenzymatic activities intersect the stoichiometric and metabolic theories of ecology, they provide a functional measure of the threshold at which control of community metabolism shifts from nutrient to energy flow.
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              GLACIAL ECOSYSTEMS

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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                Journal
                Braz J Microbiol
                Braz. J. Microbiol
                Brazilian Journal of Microbiology
                Elsevier
                1517-8382
                1678-4405
                15 February 2018
                Jul-Sep 2018
                15 February 2018
                : 49
                : 3
                : 443-451
                Affiliations
                [a ]Chinese Academy of Sciences, Northwest Institute of Eco-Environment and Resources, Key Laboratory of Desert and Desertification, Lanzhou, China
                [b ]Key Laboratory of Extreme Environmental Microbial Resources and Engineering, Lanzhou, Gansu Province, China
                [c ]Chinese Academy of Sciences, Northwest Institute of Eco-Environment and Resources, State Key Laboratory of Cryospheric Sciences, Lanzhou, China
                Author notes
                [* ] Corresponding author at: Key Laboratory of Desert and Desertification, Northwest Institute of Eco-Environment and Resources, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Donggang West Road No. 320, Lanzhou 730000, China. liugx@ 123456lzb.ac.cn
                Article
                S1517-8382(18)30084-4
                10.1016/j.bjm.2018.01.001
                6066779
                29631894
                cd117048-1bcb-47c8-a222-63c4d72c034f
                © 2018 Published by Elsevier Editora Ltda. on behalf of Sociedade Brasileira de Microbiologia.

                This is an open access article under the CC BY-NC-ND license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/).

                History
                : 4 June 2015
                : 24 October 2016
                Categories
                Environmental Microbiology

                tianshan no. 1 glacier,foreland,culturable bacteria,soil biochemical characteristics

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