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  4. Assessing the responses of Sphagnum micro-eukaryotes to climate changes using high throughput sequencing
 
research article

Assessing the responses of Sphagnum micro-eukaryotes to climate changes using high throughput sequencing

Reczuga, Monika K.
•
Seppey, Christophe Victor William
•
Mulot, Matthieu
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September 18, 2020
Peerj

Current projections suggest that climate warming will be accompanied by more frequent and severe drought events. Peatlands store ca. one third of the world's soil organic carbon. Warming and drought may cause peatlands to become carbon sources through stimulation of microbial activity increasing ecosystem respiration, with positive feedback effect on global warming. Micro-eukaryotes play a key role in the carbon cycle through food web interactions and therefore, alterations in their community structure and diversity may affect ecosystem functioning and could reflect these changes. We assessed the diversity and community composition of Sphagnum-associated eukaryotic microorganisms inhabiting peatlands and their response to experimental drought and warming using high throughput sequencing of environmental DNA. Under drier conditions, micro-eukaryotic diversity decreased, the relative abundance of autotrophs increased and that of osmotrophs (including Fungi and Peronosporomycetes) decreased. Furthermore, we identified climate change indicators that could be used as early indicators of change in peatland microbial communities and ecosystem functioning. The changes we observed indicate a shift towards a more "terrestrial'' community in response to drought, in line with observed changes in the functioning of the ecosystem.

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Type
research article
DOI
10.7717/peerj.9821
Web of Science ID

WOS:000570978600002

Author(s)
Reczuga, Monika K.
Seppey, Christophe Victor William
Mulot, Matthieu
Jassey, Vincent E. J.
Buttler, Alexandre  
Slowinska, Sandra
Slowinski, Michal
Lara, Enrique
Lamentowicz, Mariusz
Mitchell, Edward A. D.
Date Issued

2020-09-18

Publisher

PEERJ INC

Published in
Peerj
Volume

8

Article Number

e9821

Subjects

Multidisciplinary Sciences

•

Science & Technology - Other Topics

•

wetlands

•

protists

•

warming

•

water table manipulation

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food-web

•

biodiversity

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community structure

•

testate amebas

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carbon-cycle

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short-term

•

peatland

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temperature

•

populations

•

diversity

•

patterns

•

impact

Editorial or Peer reviewed

REVIEWED

Written at

EPFL

EPFL units
PERL  
Available on Infoscience
October 4, 2020
Use this identifier to reference this record
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/172210
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