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메타지노믹스를 이용한 스발바드 지역의 토양 미소동물 군집 연구 : A new perspective on arctic soil metazoan diversity: metagenetics reveals local and geographical patterns of variation in community structure and habitat specialization in high arctic tundra of Svalbard

DC Field Value Language
dc.contributor.advisorJonathan Adams-
dc.contributor.author박정옥-
dc.date.accessioned2017-07-19T09:07:20Z-
dc.date.available2017-07-19T09:07:20Z-
dc.date.issued2015-02-
dc.identifier.other000000024978-
dc.identifier.urihttps://hdl.handle.net/10371/131579-
dc.description학위논문 (석사)-- 서울대학교 대학원 : 생명과학부, 2015. 2. Jonathan Adams.-
dc.description.abstractLittle is known of the diversity, community structuring, niche differentiation and habitat specialization of small soil Metazoa in polar environments.
Here, I studied three contrasting high arctic tundra types at Kongsford, NW Svalbard (78° 55 N), comparing the small soil Metazoa community in each along with the comparison to a mid-latitude temperate forest site in Korea (37 deg.N), using an identical interrupted grid sampling scheme. In addition, communities of nematode present in local microsites (rhizosphere, cyanobacterial mat, etc.) in the arctic tundra were also compared.
Soil Metazoa, mostly nematodes were extracted using combined Baermann funnel and sugar flotation, and the DNA extracted, PCR amplified for the NF1-18Sr2b region of the 18s rRNA gene, and 454 pyrosequenced.
Our samples revealed diverse communities of soil Metazoa in all three tundra types, with species proxy (operational taxonomic unit, [OTU]) diversity far exceeding the species diversity based on morphological surveys in previous studies of Svalbard. There was no difference in OTU α-diversity between the three tundra types. I found no correlation between nematode and soil properties but across individual samples there was a positive correlation between Shannon α-diversity with TOC, C/N ratio and P2O5. β-diversity was significantly higher in IV and LV tundra, suggesting that their mosaic of bare and vegetated patches supports a greater range of local metazoan communities than the more uniformly vegetated HV tundra.
HV tundra had a distinct community from the LV tundra type, with the community of IV tundra falling between these in terms of OTU composition, indicating an important element of niche and habitat differentiation amongst small soil Metazoa between the three different tundra types.
Different microsite types were differentiated at some degree based on NMDS resulted from Bray Curtis similarity matrix. The strongest differences were between rhizophere and cyanobacterial mat areas, and this pattern was consistent for Nematoda and for all Metazoa combined. However, no distinct community composition of the Metazoa was found within the microsites (e.g. between the rhizosphere of two different cushion plant species) suggesting the limits of microhabitat specialization in this environment.
Overall, total nitrogen, total organic carbon and available phosphorus in the soil in each microsite were the best predictor of variation in both total metazoan and nematode communities. Despite the evidence of niche specialization in the communities, there was only about 5.56% of overlap in OTUs shared among different microsites suggesting that many species are actually quite generalized in their distribution and most likely in their ecology.
However, I concluded that despite this being an extreme environment amongst land ecosystems, normally thought to require generalized niches amongst animals, the Metazoa in the high arctic tundra are still to some extent habitat-specialized.
When the Svalbard tundra was compared with temperate forest, arctic tundra had markedly lower alpha-diversity for soil Metazoa than the temperate forest, reinforcing the view that there may be a classic latitudinal diversity difference in this group. However, two of the three sites in the Svalbard tundra had higher beta diversity than the Korean temperate forest, while a third tundra site has equally high beta diversity. This may reflect the greater influence of small scale environmental heterogeneity within the tundra compared to temperate forest.
Also of interest is the fact that while most Metazoa OTUs in the temperate forest did not occur in the tundra, and vice versa, reflecting the degree of geographical endemism or environmental specialization that differentiates these regions. However, a small proportion (around 10%) of species do apparently occur in both environments despite their very distinct environments.
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dc.description.tableofcontentsCONTENTS
ABSTRACT Ⅰ
CONTENTS Ⅳ
LIST OF FIGURES Ⅷ
LIST OF TABLES Ⅸ
CHAPTER1. GENERAL INTRODUCTION 1
1.1 General knowledge of arctic soil Metazoa 1
1.2 Objectives of this study 10
CHAPTER2. DISTINCT SOIL METAZOAN COMMUNITIES ACROSS DIFFERENT TUNDRA TYPES WITHIN THE SVALBARD HIGH ARCTIC TUNDRA. 14
2.1 Introduction 14
2.2 Methodology 19
2.2.1 Site description 19
2.2.2 Sampling method 23
2.2.3 Soil metazoan DNA extraction 24
2.2.4 DNA extraction, PCR and pyrosequencing of 18SrRNA gene 24
2.2.5 Sequencing processing 25
2.2.6 Statistical analysis 26
2.2.7 Soil analysis 29
2.3 Results 30
2.3.1 General findings 30
2.3.2 α- and β-diversity in the main tundra types of Svalbard 33
2.3.3 Difference in Metazoa community composition among tundra types 36
2.3.4 Soil parameters predicting Metazoa diversity and relative abundance within the Svalbard tundra 40
2.4 Discussion 42
2.4.1Nematode species diversity detected by this metagenetic study is much higher than is detected by classical morphological studies 42
2.4.2 Differences in Nematoda α- and β-diversity between the different main tundra types of Svalbard 43
2.4.3 Difference in nematode and total soil metazoan community composition between the different main tundra types of Svalbard 47
CHAPTER3. MICROSITE DIFFERENTIATION IN SOIL METAZOAN COMMUNITIES WITHIN THE SVALBARD HIGH ARCTIC TUNDRA. 52
3.1 Introduction 52
3.2 Methodology 55
3.2.1 Site description 55
3.2.2 Sampling method 57
3.2.3 Soil metazoan DNA extraction 61
3.2.4 DNA extraction, PCR and pyrosequencing of 18SrRNA gene 63
3.2.5 Sequencing processing 64
3.2.6 Statistical analysis 65
3.2.7 Soil analysis 67
3.3 Results 68
3.3.1 General findings 68
3.3.2 Community composition of each microsite type 69
3.3.3 Rhizosphere metazoan community of two different plant species 74
3.4 Discussion 78
3.4.1 There is a distinct community composition of Metazoa between different microsite 78
3.4.2 Metazoan community of the rhizosphere is not affected by the species identity of the host plant 79
CHAPTER4. How do polar soil Metazoa communities differ from temperate ones? High polar tundra and temperate forest compared using a common methodology. 82
4.1 Introduction 82
4.2 Methodology 90
4.2.1 Sampling times and sites 90
4.2.2 Sampling method 92
4.2.3 Soil Metazoa DNA extraction 94
4.2.4 DNA extraction, PCR and pyrosequencing of 18SrRNA gene 95
4.2.5 Sequence processing 96
4.2.6 Statistical analysis 97
4.2.7 Soil analysis 99
4.3 Results 100
4.3.1 General findings 100
4.3.2 α-,β-diversity and community composition in the arctic and temperate biome 101
4.3.3 Community composition 104
4.3.4 Shared OTUs and Indicator OTUs 107
4.3.5 Soil properties structuring community composition 111
4.4 Discussion 113
4.4.1 Metazoa α-diversity of Svalbard tundra is less than that of Korean temperate forest, but the tundra has higher β-diversity 113
4.4.2 There is little OTU overlap between Korean temperate forest and Svalbard tundra 115
4.4.3 Nematode guild structure is different between the Korean and Svalbard sites 116
CONCLUSIONS 118
REFERENCES 121
SUPPLEMENTARY 140
국문초록 144
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dc.formatapplication/pdf-
dc.format.extent3224714 bytes-
dc.format.mediumapplication/pdf-
dc.language.isoen-
dc.publisher서울대학교 대학원-
dc.subjectnematode-
dc.subjectDNA-
dc.subjecttundra-
dc.subjectmetagenetics-
dc.subject454 pyrosequencing-
dc.subjectdiversity-
dc.subject.ddc570-
dc.title메타지노믹스를 이용한 스발바드 지역의 토양 미소동물 군집 연구-
dc.title.alternativeA new perspective on arctic soil metazoan diversity: metagenetics reveals local and geographical patterns of variation in community structure and habitat specialization in high arctic tundra of Svalbard-
dc.typeThesis-
dc.contributor.AlternativeAuthorPark JungOk-
dc.description.degreeMaster-
dc.citation.pagesⅨ, 145-
dc.contributor.affiliation자연과학대학 생명과학부-
dc.date.awarded2015-02-
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