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      Forest Soil Bacteria: Diversity, Involvement in Ecosystem Processes, and Response to Global Change.

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          Abstract

          The ecology of forest soils is an important field of research due to the role of forests as carbon sinks. Consequently, a significant amount of information has been accumulated concerning their ecology, especially for temperate and boreal forests. Although most studies have focused on fungi, forest soil bacteria also play important roles in this environment. In forest soils, bacteria inhabit multiple habitats with specific properties, including bulk soil, rhizosphere, litter, and deadwood habitats, where their communities are shaped by nutrient availability and biotic interactions. Bacteria contribute to a range of essential soil processes involved in the cycling of carbon, nitrogen, and phosphorus. They take part in the decomposition of dead plant biomass and are highly important for the decomposition of dead fungal mycelia. In rhizospheres of forest trees, bacteria interact with plant roots and mycorrhizal fungi as commensalists or mycorrhiza helpers. Bacteria also mediate multiple critical steps in the nitrogen cycle, including N fixation. Bacterial communities in forest soils respond to the effects of global change, such as climate warming, increased levels of carbon dioxide, or anthropogenic nitrogen deposition. This response, however, often reflects the specificities of each studied forest ecosystem, and it is still impossible to fully incorporate bacteria into predictive models. The understanding of bacterial ecology in forest soils has advanced dramatically in recent years, but it is still incomplete. The exact extent of the contribution of bacteria to forest ecosystem processes will be recognized only in the future, when the activities of all soil community members are studied simultaneously.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          Microbiol. Mol. Biol. Rev.
          Microbiology and molecular biology reviews : MMBR
          American Society for Microbiology
          1098-5557
          1092-2172
          Jun 2017
          : 81
          : 2
          Affiliations
          [1 ] Laboratory of Environmental Microbiology, Institute of Microbiology of the CAS, Vestec, Czech Republic.
          [2 ] Laboratory of Environmental Microbiology, Institute of Microbiology of the CAS, Vestec, Czech Republic baldrian@biomed.cas.cz.
          Article
          81/2/e00063-16
          10.1128/MMBR.00063-16
          28404790
          441ce70f-882b-4774-a100-b64bde92cb74
          History

          bacteria,decomposition,ecosystem processes,forest ecology,global change,litter,nutrient cycling,soil

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