Standing Vegetation Exceeds Soil Microbial Communities in Soil Type Indication: A Procrustes Test of Four Salt-Affected Pastures

TitleStanding Vegetation Exceeds Soil Microbial Communities in Soil Type Indication: A Procrustes Test of Four Salt-Affected Pastures
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication2021
AuthorsCsontos P., Mucsi M., Ragalyi P., Tamas J., Kalapos T., Papay G., Mjazovszky A., Penksza K., Szili-Kovacs T.
JournalAgronomy-Basel
Volume11
Pagination12
Date PublishedAug
Type of ArticleArticle
Accession NumberWOS:000688662800001
KeywordsAgriculture, arizona, diversity, gradient, habitat indication, Microbial ecology, patterns, Plant Sciences, Procrustes analysis, puszta, quality, saline, salinity, salt sward, santa catalina mountains, vegetation science, zonation
Abstract

Organisms with different life histories are able to act as indicators of different characteristics of their environment. Here, we compared the precision of habitat indication by the vegetation and soil microbial communities in four salt-affected pastures: annual open salt sward, Pannonic Puccinellia limosa hollow, Artemisia saline puszta and grassy saline puszta. Dissimilarity of habitats was evaluated by standardized principal component analysis (PCA) based on four different datasets: catabolic profiles of microbial communities in June (a) and September (b), composition of vascular vegetation (c) and physical and chemical properties of the soil (d). Procrustes analysis was used to quantify the resemblance between pairs of PCA ordinations based on soil properties (d) and various biotic communities (a, b, c). PCA ordination based on vegetation most closely matched the soil data-based ordination, thus vegetation appears to better indicate habitat conditions than soil microbial communities do. For microbial communities, a better agreement with the soil data-based ordination was reached in September than in June. Most probably, the long-lived sedentary habit of perennial plants in these communities requires adaptation to long-term average habitat conditions. In contrast, short-lived soil microbes can quickly follow environmental changes, thus the composition of soil microbial communities better reflect actual soil conditions.

Short TitleAgronomy-BaselAgronomy-Basel
Alternate JournalAgronomy-Basel
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Times Cited: 0
Cited Reference Count: 44
Csontos, Peter Mucsi, Marton Ragalyi, Peter Tamas, Julia Kalapos, Tibor Papay, Gergely Mjazovszky, Akos Penksza, Karoly Szili-Kovacs, Tibor
Ministry of Innovation and Technology [TKP2020-IKA-12]; European Regional Development FundEuropean Commission; Hungarian Government [GINOP-2.3.2-15-2016-00056]; Hungarian National Research, Development and Innovation OfficeNational Research, Development & Innovation Office (NRDIO) - Hungary [K-108572, K-125423]
This research was supported by the Ministry of Innovation and Technology within the framework of the Thematic Excellence Program 2020, Institutional Excellence Sub-Program (TKP2020-IKA-12) in the topic of water-related researches of Szent Istvan University, and by the European Regional Development Fund and the Hungarian Government (GINOP-2.3.2-15-2016-00056). Financial support from the Hungarian National Research, Development and Innovation Office is greatly acknowledged (NKFIH-OTKA grant number K-108572 for P.C., M.M., R.P. and T.S-K, and K-125423 for P.G. and P.K.).

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Csontos, P (corresponding author), Inst Soil Sci, Ctr Agr Res, Herman O Ut 15, H-1022 Budapest, Hungary.
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