The year 2000 marks the twentieth anniversary of the publication in Soil Bi
ology & Biochemistry by Vigdis L. Torsvik (University of Bergen) of the fir
st procedure for isolation of bacterial DNA from soil (Torsvik, 1980), argu
ably initiating the subdiscipline of soil molecular microbial ecology. Sinc
e 1980, great strides have been made in the development of methods and in t
he application of genetic tools to analysis of soil microbial communities,
and many soil microbiology laboratories routinely incorporate these tools i
n their research. IT is likely that the concept of soil molecular ecology w
ill soon disappear as a subdiscipline of microbial ecology, and that these
tools will become as routine and indispensable as are genetic tools in micr
obial physiology. However, even though increasing numbers of soil microbiol
ogists use molecular biology in their research, some fundamental obstacles
must be overcome before these tools become as routine as are, for example,
many soil chemical methods. This anniversary provides an opportunity for re
trospection on the applicability of genetic tools to soil microbial ecology
, and of methodological needs for the immediate future. (C) 2000 Elsevier S
cience Ltd. All rights reserved.