Viruses are the most abundant biological
entities in the world,
but their ecological functions in soil are virtually unknown. We hypothesized
that greater abundance of T4-like phages will increase bacterial death
and thereby suppress soil organic carbon (SOC) mineralization. A range
of phage and bacterial abundances were established in sterilized soil
by reinoculation with 10–3 and 10–6 dilutions of suspensions of unsterilized soil. The total and viable
16S rRNA gene abundance (a universal marker for bacteria) was measured
by qPCR to determine bacterial abundance, with propidium monoazide
(PMA) preapplication to eliminate DNA from non-viable cells. Abundance
of the g23 marker gene was used to quantify T4-like
phages. A close negative correlation between g23 abundance
and viable 16S rRNA gene abundance was observed. High abundance of g23 led to lower viable ratios for bacteria, which suggested
that phages drove microbial necromass production. The CO2 efflux from soil increased with bacterial abundance but decreased
with higher abundance of T4-like phages. Elimination of extracellular
DNA by PMA strengthened the relationship between CO2 efflux
and bacterial abundance, suggesting that SOC mineralization by bacteria
is strongly reduced by the T4-like phages. A random forest model revealed
that abundance of T4-like phages and the abundance ratio of T4-like
phages to bacteria are better predictors of SOC mineralization (measured
as CO2 efflux) than bacterial abundance. Our study provides
experimental evidence of phages’ role in organic matter turnover
in soil: they can retard SOC decomposition but accelerate bacterial
turnover.