From carrion to soil: microbial recycling of animal carcasses

Trends Microbiol. 2024 Oct 1:S0966-842X(24)00229-4. doi: 10.1016/j.tim.2024.09.003. Online ahead of print.

Abstract

Decomposer microbial communities are gatekeepers in the redistribution of carbon and nutrients from dead animals (carrion) to terrestrial ecosystems. The flush of decomposition products from a carcass creates a hot spot of microbial activity in the soil below, and the animal's microbiome is released into the environment, mixing with soil communities. Changes in soil physicochemistry, especially reduced oxygen, temporarily constrain microbial nutrient cycling, and influence the timing of these processes and the fate of carrion resources. Carcass-related factors, such as mass, tissue composition, or even microbiome composition may also influence the functional assembly and succession of decomposer communities. Understanding these local scale microbially mediated processes is important for predicting consequences of carrion decomposition beyond the hot spot and hot moment.

Keywords: carrion; decomposition; necrobiome; soil biogeochemical cycling; terrestrial ecosystems.

Publication types

  • Review