Protist communities are more sensitive to nitrogen fertilization than other microorganisms in diverse agricultural soils
Chinese Academy of Sciences · Research Center for Eco-Environmental Sciences · +6 more institutions
Abstract
Agricultural food production is at the base of food and fodder, with fertilization having fundamentally and continuously increased crop yield over the last decades. The performance of crops is intimately tied to their microbiome as they together form holobionts. The importance of the microbiome for plant performance is, however, notoriously ignored in agricultural systems as fertilization disconnects the dependency of plants for often plant-beneficial microbial processes. Moreover, we lack a holistic understanding of how fertilization regimes affect the soil microbiome. Here, we examined the effect of a 2-year fertilization regime (no nitrogen fertilization control, nitrogen fertilization, and nitrogen fertilization plus straw amendment) on entire soil microbiomes (bacteria, fungi, and protist) in three common agricultural soil types cropped with maize in two seasons.
We found that the application of nitrogen fertilizers more strongly affected protist than bacterial and fungal communities. Nitrogen fertilization indirectly reduced protist diversity through changing abiotic properties and bacterial and fungal communities which differed between soil types and sampling seasons. Nitrogen fertilizer plus straw amendment had greater effects on soil physicochemical properties and microbiome diversity than nitrogen addition alone. Moreover, nitrogen fertilization, even more together with straw, increased soil microbiome network complexity, suggesting that the application of nitrogen fertilizers tightened soil microbiomes interactions.
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 69.51
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 81
Authors
10- ZZZhi-Bo Zhao
Chinese Academy of Sciences, Research Center for Eco-Environmental Sciences, University of Chinese Academy of Sciences
- JHJi‐Zheng He
The University of Melbourne, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Research Center for Eco-Environmental Sciences, University of Chinese Academy of Sciences
- SGStefan GeisenCorresponding
Netherlands Institute of Ecology
- LHLi-Li Han
Chinese Academy of Sciences, Research Center for Eco-Environmental Sciences, University of Chinese Academy of Sciences
- JWJuntao Wang
Chinese Academy of Sciences, Research Center for Eco-Environmental Sciences
Topics & keywords
- Biology
- Microbiome
- Agronomy
- Ecology
- Zero hunger