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Defending Earth's terrestrial microbiome

期刊

NATURE MICROBIOLOGY
卷 7, 期 11, 页码 1717-1725

出版社

NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/s41564-022-01228-3

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资金

  1. Ambizione grant from the Swiss National Science Foundation [PZ00P3_17990]
  2. DOB Ecology
  3. Bernina Foundation

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Microbial life plays a crucial role in Earth's ecosystems, but its biodiversity is currently under threat. It is important to conserve and restore soil microbial life, particularly soil fungi, and actively incorporate microbial biodiversity into managed landscapes. Research shows that restoring native soil microbiomes can significantly increase plant biomass production. Enhancing microbial biodiversity in managed landscapes, such as agriculture and forestry, is an underappreciated opportunity to build reservoirs of microbial life across the planet.
Microbial life represents the majority of Earth's biodiversity. Across disparate disciplines from medicine to forestry, scientists continue to discover how the microbiome drives essential, macro-scale processes in plants, animals and entire ecosystems. Yet, there is an emerging realization that Earth's microbial biodiversity is under threat. Here we advocate for the conservation and restoration of soil microbial life, as well as active incorporation of microbial biodiversity into managed food and forest landscapes, with an emphasis on soil fungi. We analyse 80 experiments to show that native soil microbiome restoration can accelerate plant biomass production by 64% on average, across ecosystems. Enormous potential also exists within managed landscapes, as agriculture and forestry are the dominant uses of land on Earth. Along with improving and stabilizing yields, enhancing microbial biodiversity in managed landscapes is a critical and underappreciated opportunity to build reservoirs, rather than deserts, of microbial life across our planet. As markets emerge to engineer the ecosystem microbiome, we can avert the mistakes of aboveground ecosystem management and avoid microbial monocultures of single high-performing microbial strains, which can exacerbate ecosystem vulnerability to pathogens and extreme events. Harnessing the planet's breadth of microbial life has the potential to transform ecosystem management, but it requires that we understand how to monitor and conserve the Earth's microbiome. Efforts to futureproof global microbial biodiversity are proposed, in particular in managed landscapes, to monitor, manage and restore the soil fungal microbiome.

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