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Soil protistology rebooted: 30 fundamental questions to start with
ISSN
0038-0717
Date Issued
2017
Author(s)
Geisen, Stefan
Mitchell, Edward A. D.
Wilkinson, David M.
Adl, Sina
Bonkowski, Michael
Brown, Matthew W.
Fiore-Donno, Anna Maria
Heger, Thierry J.
Jassey, Vincent E. J.
Lahr, Daniel J. G.
Marcisz, Katarzyna
Mulot, Matthieu
Payne, Richard
Singer, David
Anderson, O. Roger
Charman, Dan J.
Ekelund, Flemming
Griffiths, Bryan S.
Ronn, Regin
Smirnov, Alexey
Bass, David
Belbahri, Lassaad
Berney, Cedric
Blandenier, Quentin
Chatzinotas, Antonis
Clarholm, Marianne
Dunthorn, Micah
Feest, Alan
Fernandez, Leonardo D.
Foissner, Wilhelm
Fournier, Bertrand
Gentekaki, Eleni
Hajek, Michal
Helder, Johannes
Jousset, Alexandre J. F.
Koller, Robert
Kumar, Santosh
La Terza, Antonietta
Lamentowicz, Mariusz
Mazei, Yuri
Santos, Susana S.
Seppey, Christophe V. W.
Spiegel, Frederick W.
Walochnik, Julia
Winding, Anne
Lara, Enrique
DOI
10.1016/j.soilbio.2017.04.001
Abstract
Protists are the most diverse eukaryotes. These microbes are keystone organisms of soil ecosystems and regulate essential processes of soil fertility such as nutrient cycling and plant growth. Despite this, protists have received little scientific attention, especially compared to bacteria, fungi and nematodes in soil studies. Recent methodological advances, particularly in molecular biology techniques, have made the study of soil protists more accessible, and have created a resurgence of interest in soil protistology. This ongoing revolution now enables comprehensive investigations of the structure and functioning of soil protist communities, paving the way to a new era in soil biology. Instead of providing an exhaustive review, we provide a synthesis of research gaps that should be prioritized in future studies of soil protistology to guide this rapidly developing research area. Based on a synthesis of expert opinion we propose 30 key questions covering a broad range of topics including evolution, phylogenetics, functional ecology, macroecology, paleoecology, and methodologies. These questions highlight a diversity of topics that will establish soil protistology as a hub discipline connecting different fundamental and applied fields such as ecology, biogeography, evolution, plant-microbe interactions, agronomy, and conservation biology. We are convinced that soil protistology has the potential to be one of the most exciting frontiers in biology. (C) 2017 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.