Compositional and functional analysis of the bacterial community of Mediterranean Leptosols under livestock grazing

Sci Total Environ. 2024 May 15:925:171811. doi: 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2024.171811. Epub 2024 Mar 19.

Abstract

The composition and functioning of soil bacterial communities, as well as their responses to multiple perturbations, are not well understood in the terrestrial ecosystems. Our study focuses on the bacterial community of erosive and poorly developed soils (Haplic Leptosols) in Mediterranean rangelands of Extremadura (W Spain) with different grazing intensities. Leptosols from similar natural conditions were selected and sampled at two depths to determine the soil properties as well as the structure and activity of bacterial communities. As grazing intensified, the soil C and N content increased, as did the number and diversity of bacteria, mainly of fast-growing lineages. Aridibacter, Acidobacteria Gp6 and Gp10, Gemmatimonas, and Segetibacter increased their abundance along the grazing-intensity gradient. Firmicutes such as Romboutsia and Turicibacter from livestock microbiome also increased. In functional terms, the KEGG pathways enriched in the soils with moderate and high grazing intensity were ABC transporters, DNA repair and recombination proteins, the two-component system, and the degradation of xenobiotics. All of these proved to be related to stronger cell division and response mechanisms to environmental stressors such as drought, warming, toxic substances, and nutrient deprivation. Consequently, the bacterial community was affected by grazing, but appeared to adapt and counteract the effects of a high grazing intensity. Therefore, a clearly detrimental effect of grazing was not detected in the bacterial community of the soils studied.

Keywords: Degraded soils; High-throughput sequencing; Metagenomics; Rangeland.

MeSH terms

  • Acidobacteria
  • Animals
  • Bacteria / genetics
  • Ecosystem*
  • Livestock
  • Microbiota*
  • Soil / chemistry
  • Soil Microbiology

Substances

  • Soil