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Land use alters bacterial growth dynamics in soil
Authors:Cassandra J. Wattenburger  Daniel H. Buckley
Affiliation:1. Soil and Crop Sciences Section, School of Integrative Plant Science, Cornell University, Ithaca, New York, USA

Contribution: Conceptualization (equal), Data curation (lead), Formal analysis (lead), ​Investigation (lead), Writing - original draft (lead), Writing - review & editing (equal);2. Soil and Crop Sciences Section, School of Integrative Plant Science, Cornell University, Ithaca, New York, USA

Abstract:Microbial growth and mortality are major determinants of soil carbon cycling. We measured in situ growth dynamics of individual bacterial taxa in cropped and successional soils in response to a resource pulse. We hypothesized that land use imposes selection pressures on growth characteristics. We estimated growth and death for 453 and 73 taxa, respectively. The average generation time was 5.04 ± 6.28 (SD; range 0.7–63.5) days. Lag times were shorter in cultivated than successional soils and resource amendment decreased lag times. Taxa exhibiting the greatest growth response also exhibited the greatest mortality, indicative of boom-and-bust dynamics. We observed a bimodal growth rate distribution, representing fast- and slow-growing clusters. Both clusters grew more rapidly in successional soils, which had more organic matter, than cultivated soils. Resource amendment increased the growth rate of the slower growing but not the faster-growing cluster via a mixture of increased growth rates and species turnover, indicating that competitive dynamics constrain growth rates in situ. These two clusters show that copiotrophic bacteria in soils may be subdivided into different life history groups and that these subgroups respond independently to land use and resource availability.
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