Soil Viruses: A New Hope

As abundant members of microbial communities, viruses impact microbial mortality, carbon and nutrient cycling, and food web dynamics. Although most of our information about viral communities comes from marine systems, evidence is mounting to suggest that viruses are similarly important in soil.As ab...

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Main Author: Joanne B. Emerson
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: American Society for Microbiology 2019-05-01
Series:mSystems
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1128/mSystems.00120-19
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spelling doaj-a937d7ea931445e3818e654e8d80b4812020-11-24T21:54:05ZengAmerican Society for MicrobiologymSystems2379-50772019-05-0143e00120-1910.1128/mSystems.00120-19Soil Viruses: A New HopeJoanne B. EmersonAs abundant members of microbial communities, viruses impact microbial mortality, carbon and nutrient cycling, and food web dynamics. Although most of our information about viral communities comes from marine systems, evidence is mounting to suggest that viruses are similarly important in soil.As abundant members of microbial communities, viruses impact microbial mortality, carbon and nutrient cycling, and food web dynamics. Although most of our information about viral communities comes from marine systems, evidence is mounting to suggest that viruses are similarly important in soil. Here I outline soil viral metagenomic approaches and the current state of soil viral ecology as a field, and then I highlight existing knowledge gaps that we can begin to fill. We are poised to elucidate soil viral contributions to terrestrial ecosystem processes, considering: the full suite of potential hosts across trophic scales, the ecological impacts of different viral replication strategies, links to economically relevant outcomes like crop productivity, and measurable in situ virus-host population dynamics across spatiotemporal scales and environmental conditions. Soon, we will learn how soil viruses contribute to food webs linked to organic matter decomposition, carbon and nutrient cycling, greenhouse gas emissions, and agricultural productivity.https://doi.org/10.1128/mSystems.00120-19metagenomicsmicrobial ecologysoil microbiologyvirus
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Joanne B. Emerson
spellingShingle Joanne B. Emerson
Soil Viruses: A New Hope
mSystems
metagenomics
microbial ecology
soil microbiology
virus
author_facet Joanne B. Emerson
author_sort Joanne B. Emerson
title Soil Viruses: A New Hope
title_short Soil Viruses: A New Hope
title_full Soil Viruses: A New Hope
title_fullStr Soil Viruses: A New Hope
title_full_unstemmed Soil Viruses: A New Hope
title_sort soil viruses: a new hope
publisher American Society for Microbiology
series mSystems
issn 2379-5077
publishDate 2019-05-01
description As abundant members of microbial communities, viruses impact microbial mortality, carbon and nutrient cycling, and food web dynamics. Although most of our information about viral communities comes from marine systems, evidence is mounting to suggest that viruses are similarly important in soil.As abundant members of microbial communities, viruses impact microbial mortality, carbon and nutrient cycling, and food web dynamics. Although most of our information about viral communities comes from marine systems, evidence is mounting to suggest that viruses are similarly important in soil. Here I outline soil viral metagenomic approaches and the current state of soil viral ecology as a field, and then I highlight existing knowledge gaps that we can begin to fill. We are poised to elucidate soil viral contributions to terrestrial ecosystem processes, considering: the full suite of potential hosts across trophic scales, the ecological impacts of different viral replication strategies, links to economically relevant outcomes like crop productivity, and measurable in situ virus-host population dynamics across spatiotemporal scales and environmental conditions. Soon, we will learn how soil viruses contribute to food webs linked to organic matter decomposition, carbon and nutrient cycling, greenhouse gas emissions, and agricultural productivity.
topic metagenomics
microbial ecology
soil microbiology
virus
url https://doi.org/10.1128/mSystems.00120-19
work_keys_str_mv AT joannebemerson soilvirusesanewhope
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