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What Controls Resistance and Resilience of the Soil Microbial Community?.

Tuesday, November 5, 2013: 10:20 AM
Tampa Convention Center, Room 1 and 2, First Floor

Bryan Griffiths, SRUC, King’s Buildings, Edinburgh EH9 3JG, Scotland
Soil is increasingly under environmental pressures that alter its capacity to fulfil essential ecosystem services. To maintain these crucial soil functions, it is important to know how soil microorganisms respond to disturbance or environmental change. Here, I  summarize the recent progress in understanding the resistance and resilience (stability) of soil microbial communities and discuss the underlying mechanisms of soil biological stability together with the factors affecting it. Biological stability is not solely owing to the structure or diversity of the microbial community but is linked to a range of other vegetation and soil properties including aggregation and substrate quality. I suggest that resistance and resilience are governed by soil physico-chemical structure through its effect on microbial community composition and physiology, but that there is no general response to disturbance because stability is particular to the disturbance and soil history. Soil stability results from a combination of biotic and abiotic soil characteristics and so could provide a quantitative measure of soil health that can be translated into practice. Examples are given from a Scottish farm survey, in which biological responses including resistance, resilience and microbial community structure were attributed to farming practices and underlying soil characteristics. A measure of resistance and resilience is also being trialled as an indicator of soil function in a pan-European project and preliminary data will be discussed.
See more from this Division: SSSA Division: Soil Biology & Biochemistry
See more from this Session: Symposium--Ecosystem Resilience: Influence of Soil Microbial and Biophysical Processes On Ecosystem Function

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