
Arbuscular mycorrhizal (AM) fungal communities are now known to vary with depth in arable land. Here we use two previously published high-throughput Illumina sequencing data sets, and compare a 52 year long chronosequence of recultivated agriculture fields after a topsoil and subsoil mixing event, with a set of undisturbed topsoil and subsoil samples from a similar field. We show that AM taxa identified as subsoil indicators are exclusively present in early stages of the chronosequence, whereas topsoil indicator taxa can be found across the chronosequence, and that similarities from the chronosequence fields to the subsoil communities decrease with time. Our results provide evidence on the ecological specialization of certain AM fungal taxa to deep soil layers.
ecological specialization, illumina MiSeq, Ecology, arbuscular mycorrhiza, Evolution, subsoil, soil depth, QH359-425, QH540-549.5, agriculture
ecological specialization, illumina MiSeq, Ecology, arbuscular mycorrhiza, Evolution, subsoil, soil depth, QH359-425, QH540-549.5, agriculture
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