The change in soil actinobiote under the influence of Heracleum sosnowskyi invasion
E. V. Tovstik, I. G. Shirokikh, E. S. Solovеva, A. A. Shirokikh, T. Ya. Ashikhmina, V. P. Savinykh
Section: Population ecology
Certain plant species, as well as phytocenosis, can significantly influence the structure and diversity of soil microbiocenosis.
Actinomycetes are an integral component of a soil microbiocenosis that carries out important environmental
functions, inter alia, with the transformation of organic matter. This study was carried out to reveal differences
in the structure of soil actinomycetes complexes between sites overgrown with the Heracleum Sosnowskyi Manden and
non-invasive (control) plots. An increase in genus and species diversity of actinomycetes in invaded soils was noted,
compared with control, in particular, the representatives of the genus Streptosporangium were found exclusively on
hogweed-occupied plots. The appearance of Streptosporangium in the structure of soils actinomycete complexes under
hogweed may indicate that hogweed root exudates contain compounds attractive for this mycelial prokaryotes genus. On
the same plots, an increase in the proportion of colored streptomycetes representing the section and series of Cinereus
Chromogenes was noted, whereas in the control soils streptomycetin complex, the non-producing pigments were dominated
by representatives of the section and series of Cinereus Achromogenes. In the areas of mass growth of Heracleum
Sosnowskyi, in comparison with the control plots, a lower carbon content in the soil was noted, which, in addition to the
changes in the structure of actinomycete complexes, confirms the fact of intensive organic matter mineralization in soils
under the hogweed. Despite the considerable above-ground biomass, at the end of vegetation the removal of nutrients is
not replenished by the hogweed plant litter.
Keywords: Heracleum sosnowskyi Manden., soil, invasion, actinomycetes, total number, species diversity, structure of the complex
Article published in number 4 for 2018 DOI: 10.25750/1995-4301-2018-4-105-109