Design of field survey
The team will discuss, develop and agree on a survey plan by considering scientific criteria as well as cost and logistic constraints. Chaosheng Zhang and Yunfan Li will conduct a dedicated, preliminary hot and cool spot analysis of existing Tellus soil data with a particular focus on the most likely biologically important elements. 200 sites will be selected for sampling.
Soil microbial biodiversity
Using the survey design developed an extensive field sampling campaign will be conducted. Soil samples for microbial analysis will be collected from identified locations using sterile procedures. Following the protocols (including soil storage, transport etc) established by the Earth Microbiome Project, microbial DNA will be extracted from soil samples using Qiagen DNeasy PowerSoil Kit (Qiagen, Hilden, Germany), followed by PCR amplification of bacterial 16S rRNA V3-V4 region, fungal ITS2 region and archaeal 16S rRNA V4-V5 region using specific primers. High-throughput sequencing using the Illumina MiSeq platform and standard bioinformatics will be performed by Novogene Co. Ltd to characterize the diversity and composition of the microbial community. Abundances of bacterial, fungal and archaeal taxa in soil samples will be assessed using the RT-qPCR technique.
Soil faunal biodiversity:
Traditional sampling and morphological identification of all or most soil fauna is not feasible given the ambitious sampling required for mapping purposes versus the labour and time requirements for full soil animal sorting, enumeration and identification. Therefore, a rapid protocol will be used. The protocol will follow selected techniques of the SoilBon Foodweb initiative, a global collaborative network to monitor soil animal communities using rapid, consistent methodologies (Potapov et al., 2022). In brief, a standard 19.6 cm2 area (5 cm diameter) steel corer will be used to extract 10 cm deep soil cores. Soil microfauna (nematodes) and mesofauna (enchytraeid worms) will be extracted from separate cores using Baermann funnels for wet extraction. Soil micro-arthropods (mites and springtails) will be extracted from separate cores using Tullgren/Berlese-type dry extraction with a light bulb. Animal enumeration, identification and body-mass estimation will be done using a novel high-throughput approach based on image analysis of mixed communities. High-resolution images of each sample will be generated by a flatbed scanner and analysed by a computer-vision pipeline based on deep learning algorithms currently under development and peer-review (details Potapov et al., 2022).