2013
DOI: 10.1111/mec.12190
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Impacts of inundation and drought on eukaryote biodiversity in semi‐arid floodplain soils

Abstract: Floodplain ecosystems are characterized by alternating wet and dry phases and periodic inundation defines their ecological character. Climate change, river regulation and the construction of levees have substantially altered natural flooding and drying regimes worldwide with uncertain effects on key biotic groups. In southern Australia, we hypothesized that soil eukaryotic communities in climate change affected areas of a semi-arid floodplain would transition towards comprising mainly dry-soil specialist speci… Show more

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Cited by 55 publications
(51 citation statements)
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“…Based on our analysis of DNA and microbial biomass, the amount of cells and ribosomal DNA molecules of soil animals is in minority compared with that of bacteria and fungi, which is in agreement with previous studies targeting SSU and LSU (Baldwin et al, 2013;Ramirez et al, 2014;Tedersoo et al, 2015a). The fungal dominance could be related to the actual differences in the number of cells and/or copies of ribosomal DNA (Medinger et al, 2010;Vetrovsky and Baldrian, 2013).…”
Section: Methodological Advancessupporting
confidence: 89%
“…Based on our analysis of DNA and microbial biomass, the amount of cells and ribosomal DNA molecules of soil animals is in minority compared with that of bacteria and fungi, which is in agreement with previous studies targeting SSU and LSU (Baldwin et al, 2013;Ramirez et al, 2014;Tedersoo et al, 2015a). The fungal dominance could be related to the actual differences in the number of cells and/or copies of ribosomal DNA (Medinger et al, 2010;Vetrovsky and Baldrian, 2013).…”
Section: Methodological Advancessupporting
confidence: 89%
“…The supergroup Amoebozoa was of particular interest, as no comprehensive molecular taxonomic analysis of this protist supergroup in soil exists to date because of PCR-primer biases (Baldwin et al, 2013;Bates et al, 2013). For this purpose, we constructed a high-resolution reference database and taxonomy of Amoebozoa (see Table 2 and Materials and Methods for details).…”
Section: Community Composition Of Amoebozoamentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The soil community was strongly dominated by fungi, in particular ascomycetes, but cercozoans, ciliates and some algae were also part of the community. Community composition was therefore dominated by taxa typically reported for rivers (Gamier et al 1995 Crump et al 2012, Baldwin et al 2013, Geisen et al 2015, Grossmann et al 2016.…”
Section: Habitat-specific Community Structurementioning
confidence: 99%
“…However, we suspect that fungi are overrepresented in the sequence libraries because specifically the reverse primers have originally been designed for fungi. Because fungi were expected to be a dominant component specifically in soil (O'Brien et al 2005, Barrios 2007, Baldwin et al 2013), a certain bias towards this group and a presumably good taxon coverage for this group was considered advantageous when selecting the primer set. In contrast, a low read abundance for e.g.…”
Section: Habitat-specific Community Structurementioning
confidence: 99%
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