Andre F Cruz
Kyoto Prefectural University, Japan
Title: Operational taxonomic units that distinguish soils of crops and fruits in the whole Japan
Biography
Biography: Andre F Cruz
Abstract
The microbial community evaluation constitutes an essential topic to access the soil health conditions, with special regard to the operational taxonomic units (OTU). This data can easily represent the soil bacterial condition and also might distinguish many kinds of environment, such as urban areas, and agricultural soils. As a criterion to set up a “finger-print” for agricultural soils in terms of microbial community, metagenomic profiles from crops and fruit soils had their OTU analyzed after the normalizing their abundance where the sum of each sample was equivalent to 1. The bacterial and fungal genes were the target region evaluated by principal component analysis (PCA). Although some dominant taxonomic groups were constantly present in most of the soils, the OTU within the bacterial and fungal communities were specific according to the land use type (crops or fruits) i.e. each one had a remarkable difference in terms of OTU. Hokkaido prefecture contained most of specific groups, whereas other prefectures were more diverse. Similar profile was found in fungal genes. Within the bacterial genes a few number of OTUs made possible to separate crops and fruit soils, however for the fungal ones a large number was necessary for the same goal. The bacterial representative genera were Nitrospira (involved with Nitrogen cycling) and Arthrobacter. Whereas the Fusarium was the most important fungus in terms of OTU bioindicator.