Microbial Ecology

Investigating host feeding strategy as a determinant of gut microbial community profile

Poster Number: 
401
Presenter/Primary Author: 
Cristina Takacs-Vesbach

Diverse microbial communities live in the gut regions of animals. The precise ecological and evolutionary circumstances that govern relationships between hosts and their gut communities is unclear. In this study, we hypothesize that host feeding strategy shapes the microbial communities within the gut systems of insects. We collected five insect species from the Sevilleta National Wildlife Refuge that exhibited herbivorous, detritovorous and carnivorous diets.

Aeolian flux of microorganisms in the McMurdo Dry Valleys, Antarctica

Poster Number: 
380
Presenter/Primary Author: 
Marie Sabacka

The McMurdo Dry Valleys in Antarctica (MCM) forms one of the most extreme deserts on Earth. It consists of a mosaic of permanently ice-covered lakes, ephemeral streams, exposed soils, and glaciers. Microorganisms are the only life forms occupying these landscape units. Given the relatively low and seasonal growth rates of these organisms, we contend that the distribution of microorganisms within this environment is controlled by physical factors.

Denitrification in desert soils: Importance of Fungi

Poster Number: 
378
Presenter/Primary Author: 
Yevgeniy Marusenko

Denitrification is a key step returning nitrogen from soils to the atmosphere. The primary denitrifiers in most ecosystems are heterotrophic bacteria. Although, fungi are also known to transform nitrogen compounds, such as the production of N2O, but few studies have explored this process in soils. Aridland systems experience high temperatutres and low moisture conditions, favoring fungi in these environments. Thus, we explored the role of fungi and bacteria in denitrification of Sonoran Desert soils.

Alder strategies for phosphorus assimilation across a boreal forest successional sequence

Poster Number: 
355
Presenter/Primary Author: 
Michaela Swanson

Ecosystem processes in northern systems depend heavily on inputs of biologically fixed nitrogen (N) from A. tenuifolia, which contributes the majority of N accumulated during boreal forest succession. However because of the high phosphorus (P) demands of this plant, we hypothesize that N-fixation inputs are controlled by the ability of alder to assimilate P through associations with ectomycorrhizal fungi (EMF), which produce enzymes that mobilize organic and recalcitrant P forms.

SEVILLETA LTER Abiotic Pulses and Constraints: Dynamics and stability in an aridland ecosystem

Poster Number: 
352
Presenter/Primary Author: 
Scott Collins

The Sevilleta LTER is located at the intersection of several aridland ecosystem types. Although it is axiomatic that water is the key limiting resource in aridland ecosystems, most arid land soils are also chronically low in nutrients and organic matter. Resource availability is a function of the frequency and size of precipitation events as well as the time between events. As a consequence, NPP and organic matter decomposition are often decoupled in space and time, and soil nutrient supply rates may limit NPP during periods when soil moisture is sufficient for plant growth.

Environmental controls on benthic microbial food webs

Poster Number: 
348
Presenter/Primary Author: 
James Hollibaugh

We examined benthic microbial communities in three contrasting subtidal salt marsh sediments over the course of a year to investigate the relationship between environmental conditions and benthic microbial community structure. Samples were collected monthly from a high energy, sandy beach, a tidal creek bed, and a Spartina alterniflora marsh border. The concentrations and biomasses of benthic microalgae (BMA), total and potentially active bacteria (measured by an enzyme-activated fluorogenic compound), heterotrophic protists, and metazoan meiofauna were measured at each location.

Arctic LTER: Goals and Results

Poster Number: 
347
Presenter/Primary Author: 
John Hobbie

The goal of the Arctic LTER is to predict the future ecological characteristics of Arctic Alaska based upon our knowledge of the controls of ecosystem structure and function as exerted by physical setting and geologic factors, climatic factors, biotic factors, and the changes in fluxes of water and materials from land to water.

Impacts of microbial competition, coevolution, and plant-microbe feedbacks on plant productivity and microbial communities in soil

Poster Number: 
344
Presenter/Primary Author: 
Matthew Bakker

Plant diversity has been studied extensively for its impact on a few basic measures, such as biomass production. However, relatively little is understood about interactions between plant diversity and microbial communities. Through removal of natural enemies with pesticide treatments, we found that foliar fungi have a significant impact on plant productivity, and that the impact is greater at higher than at lower plant diversity.

Spatial and Temporal Patterns of Bacterial Communities in Toolik Lake

Poster Number: 
318
Presenter/Primary Author: 
Sarah Barbrow

Much is known about the spatial and temporal distribution of macro-organisms and their activity rates. However, little is known about the spatial variability of microbial communities in lakes. In this study, we examined the spatial variability in both bacterial community composition and activity rates in Toolik Lake, Alaska. Community composition was characterized using denaturing gradient gel electrophoresis (DGGE) of PCR-amplified rDNA, and activity rates were measured by uptake rates of 14C-leucine.

Impact of Agricultural Practices on Bacterial Carbon Use Efficiency

Poster Number: 
312
Presenter/Primary Author: 
Zarraz Lee

Impact of Agricultural Practices on Bacterial Carbon Use Efficiency
Z. M. Lee and T. M. Schmidt
Department of Microbiology and Molecular Genetics, Michigan State University, East Lansing, MI

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