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the ISME Journal, 2 (2008) 221-232
Effects of aboveground grazing on coupling among nitrifier activity, abundance and community structure
Xavier Le Roux ( ) 1, Franck Poly 1, Pauline Currey 1, 2, Claire Commeaux 1, Brigitte Hai 3, Graeme W Nicol 4, James I Prosser 4, Michael Schloter 3, Eléonore Attard 1, Katja Klumpp 5
(2008)

The influence of switches in grassland management to or from grazing on the dynamics of nitrifier activity, as well as the abundance of ammonia-oxidizing bacteria, AOB and ammonia-oxidizing archeae, AOA, was analyzed for two years after changing management. Additionally community structure of AOB was surveyed. Four treatments were compared in mesocosms: grazing on previously grazed grassland (G-G); no grazing on ungrazed grassland (U-U); grazing on ungrazed grassland (U-G) and cessation of grazing on grazed grassland (G-U). Nitrifier activity and abundance were always higher for G-G than U-U treatments and AOB community structure differed between these treatments. AOA abundance was in the same range as AOB abundance and followed the same trend. Grazing led to a change in AOB community structure within <5 months and a subsequent (5–12 months) increase in nitrifier activity and abundance. In contrast, cessation of grazing led to a decrease in nitrifier activity and abundance within <5 months and to a later (5–12 months) change in AOB community structure. Activity in G-U and U-G was similar to that in U-U and G-G, respectively, after 12 months. Sequence analysis of 16S rRNA gene clones showed that AOB retrieved from soils fell within the Nitrosospira lineage and percentages of AOB related to known Nitrosospira groups were affected by grazing. These results demonstrate that AOB and AOA respond quickly to changes in management. The selection of nitrifiers adapted to novel environmental conditions was a prerequisite for nitrification enhancement in U-G, whereas nitrification decrease in G-U was likely due to a partial starvation and decrease in the abundance of nitrifiers initially present. The results also suggest that taxonomic affiliation does not fully infer functional traits of AOB.
1 :  Ecologie microbienne (EM)
CNRS : UMR5557 – INRA : UR1193 – Université Claude Bernard - Lyon I – Ecole Nationale Vétérinaire de Lyon
2 :  Macaulay Land Use Reaearch Institute
Macaulay Land Use Reaearch Institute
3 :  GSF National Research Center for Environment and Health
Institute of Soil Ecology
4 :  School of Biological Sciences
University of Aberdeen
5 :  Unité de recherche d'Agronomie (UA)
INRA : UR0874
5
Sciences de l'environnement/Biodiversité et Ecologie

Sciences du Vivant/Biodiversité

Sciences du Vivant/Ecologie, Environnement
ammonia oxidizers – ammonia-oxidizing bacteria – ammonia-oxidizing archeae – herbivory – microbial diversity–functioning relationship – nitrogen cycle