Soil microbial diversity in the Maintenance of Exotic vs. Native Diversity experiment (depth study)
Citation
MGnify (2020). Soil microbial diversity in the Maintenance of Exotic vs. Native Diversity experiment (depth study). Sampling event dataset https://doi.org/10.15468/gv8s4v accessed via GBIF.org on 2024-11-03.Description
Grasslands dominated by non-native species have replaced purely native-dominated areas in many parts of the world. This replacement has led to altered plant-plant interactions aboveground, but it is poorly understood how soil microbial communities differ between native and exotic plant communities. We tested how exotic vs. native plant species and summer irrigation affect bacterial and fungal community composition and diversity in a common garden experiment, Maintenance of Exotic vs. Native Diversity. In this study, the samples were taken at various soil depth: 0-10 cm, 10-30 cm, 30-60 cm, and 60-100 cm to assess if these changes are maintained in deeper soil layers.Sampling Description
Sampling
Grasslands dominated by non-native species have replaced purely native-dominated areas in many parts of the world. This replacement has led to altered plant-plant interactions aboveground, but it is poorly understood how soil microbial communities differ between native and exotic plant communities. We tested how exotic vs. native plant species and summer irrigation affect bacterial and fungal community composition and diversity in a common garden experiment, Maintenance of Exotic vs. Native Diversity. In this study, the samples were taken at various soil depth: 0-10 cm, 10-30 cm, 30-60 cm, and 60-100 cm to assess if these changes are maintained in deeper soil layers.Method steps
- Pipeline used: https://www.ebi.ac.uk/metagenomics/pipelines/4.1
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originatorIowa State University
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Iowa State University
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Iowa State University