Soil trenching : are microbial communities alike in experimental peatland plots measuring total and heterotrophic respiration?
Elsevier
2025
1-s2.0-S0038071725000392-main.pdf - Publisher's version - 1.02 MB
How to cite: Hannu Fritze, Jyrki Jauhiainen, Arta Bārdule, Aldis Butlers, Dovilė Čiuldienė, Muhammad Kamil-Sardar, Ain Kull, Raija Laiho, Andis Lazdiņš, Valters Samariks, Thomas Schindler, Kaido Soosaar, Egidijus Vigricas, Krista Peltoniemi, Soil trenching – are microbial communities alike in experimental peatland plots measuring total and heterotrophic respiration?, Soil Biology and Biochemistry, Volume 203, 2025, 109747, ISSN 0038-0717, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.soilbio.2025.109747.
Pysyvä osoite
Tiivistelmä
Soil trenching is a generally applied method used to differentiate heterotrophic respiration (RHET) from total respiration in soil CO2 flux data collection. However, the soil microbial community composition may change due to trenching and estimates of the impacts of any human-induced disturbance on RHET might be inflated if the microbial community involved was not the same as in the ambient untrenched environment. Here, we report that the bacterial and fungal community, as measured by amplicon sequencing, of 30 different research sites in peatland forests was mostly alike in trenched and untrenched plots still four years after trenching. Soil trenching thus seems to be a feasible method to study the RHET from peatland forest soils from the overall microbial community composition point of view as no major changes were observed.
ISBN
OKM-julkaisutyyppi
A1 Alkuperäisartikkeli tieteellisessä aikakauslehdessä
Julkaisusarja
Soil biology and biochemistry
Volyymi
203
Numero
Sivut
Sivut
3 p.
ISSN
0038-0717
1879-3428
1879-3428
