» Articles » PMID: 39065029

Green Roof Substrate Microbes Compose a Core Community of Stress-Tolerant Taxa

Overview
Journal Microorganisms
Specialty Microbiology
Date 2024 Jul 27
PMID 39065029
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

Extensive green roofs provide for many ecosystem services in urban environments. The efficacy of these services is influenced by the vegetation structure. Despite their key role in plant performance and productivity, but also their contribution to nitrogen fixation or carbon sequestration, green roof microbial communities have received little attention so far. No study included a spatiotemporal aspect to investigate the core microbiota residing in the substrates of extensive green roofs, although these key taxa are hypothesized to be amongst the most ecologically important taxa. Here, we identified the core microbiota residing in extensive green roof substrates and investigated whether microbial community composition is affected by the vegetation that is planted on extensive green roofs. Eleven green roofs from three different cities in Flanders (Belgium), planted either with a mixture of grasses, wildflowers and succulents ( spp.; -herbs-grasses roofs) or solely species of (-moss roofs), were seasonally sampled to investigate prokaryotic and fungal communities via metabarcoding. Identifying the key microbial taxa revealed that most taxa are dominant phylotypes in soils worldwide. Many bacterial core taxa are capable of nitrogen fixation, and most fungal key taxa are stress-tolerant saprotrophs, endophytes, or both. Considering that soil microbes adapted to the local edaphic conditions have been found to improve plant fitness, further investigation of the core microbiome is warranted to determine the extent to which these stress-tolerant microbes are beneficial for the vegetational layer. Although -herbs-grasses roofs contained more plant species than -moss roofs, we observed no discriminant microbial communities between both roof types, likely due to sharing the same substrate textures and the vegetational layers that became more similar throughout time. Future studies are recommended to comprehensively characterize the vegetational layer and composition to examine the primary drivers of microbial community assembly processes.

References
1.
Smalla K, WIELAND G, Buchner A, Zock A, Parzy J, Kaiser S . Bulk and rhizosphere soil bacterial communities studied by denaturing gradient gel electrophoresis: plant-dependent enrichment and seasonal shifts revealed. Appl Environ Microbiol. 2001; 67(10):4742-51. PMC: 93227. DOI: 10.1128/AEM.67.10.4742-4751.2001. View

2.
Gandolfi I, Bertolini V, Ambrosini R, Bestetti G, Franzetti A . Unravelling the bacterial diversity in the atmosphere. Appl Microbiol Biotechnol. 2013; 97(11):4727-36. DOI: 10.1007/s00253-013-4901-2. View

3.
Zhong S, Zhang L, Jiang X, Gao P . Comparison of chemical composition and airborne bacterial community structure in PM during haze and non-haze days in the winter in Guilin, China. Sci Total Environ. 2018; 655:202-210. DOI: 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2018.11.268. View

4.
Henault A, Heim A, Brisson J, Dagenais D, De Bellis T, Chagnon P . Stressful, isolated, yet diverse: Green roofs have rich microbiomes that are not dominated by oligotrophic taxa. Environ Microbiol Rep. 2022; 14(5):766-774. DOI: 10.1111/1758-2229.13120. View

5.
Molineux C, Connop S, Gange A . Manipulating soil microbial communities in extensive green roof substrates. Sci Total Environ. 2014; 493:632-8. DOI: 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2014.06.045. View