| Literature DB >> 34535834 |
Haiyang Li1, Nanyan Luo2, Chenglong Ji1, Jin Li1, Lan Zhang1, Li Xiao1, Xiaolin She2, Zhe Liu1, Yulong Li1, Cunshou Liu1, Qiao Guo3, Hangxian Lai4.
Abstract
Response of rhizosphere microbial community structure and co-occurrence patterns to liquid organic fertilizer in sunflower cropland was investigated. Moderate and severe saline-alkaline soils were treated with liquid organic fertilizer containing mainly small molecular organic compounds (450 g L-1) at a rate of 4500 L ha-1 year-1 over 2 years. Compared with the untreated soils, organic fertilizer treatment increased soil nutrient concentrations by 13.8-137.1% while reducing soil pH and salinity by 5.6% and 54.7%, respectively. Organic fertilizer treatment also improved sunflower yield, plant number, and plant height by 28.6-67.3%. Following organic fertilizer treatment, fungal α-diversity was increased, and the effects of salinity-alkalinity stress on rhizosphere microbial communities were alleviated. The relative abundances of some halotolerant microbes and phytopathogenic fungi were reduced in organic fertilizer-treated soils, in contrast to increases in the relative abundances of plant growth-promoting microbes and organic matter decomposers, such as Nocardioides, Rhizophagus, and Stachybotrys. Network analysis revealed that severe salinity-alkalinity stress stimulated cooperation among bacteria, while organic fertilizer treatment tended to stimulate the ecosystem functions of fungi with higher proportions of fungi-bacteria and fungi-fungi links. More keystone taxa (e.g., Amycolatopsis, Variovorax, and Gemmatimonas) were positively correlated with soil nutrient concentrations and crop yield-related traits in organic fertilizer-treated soils. Overall, liquid organic fertilizer amendment could attenuate the adverse effects of salinity-alkalinity stress on sunflower yield by improving soil quality and optimizing rhizosphere microbial community structure and co-occurrence patterns.Entities:
Keywords: Co-occurrence network; Fungal diversity; Organic fertilizer; Rhizosphere microorganisms; Saline-alkaline soils; Sunflower
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Year: 2021 PMID: 34535834 DOI: 10.1007/s00248-021-01870-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Microb Ecol ISSN: 0095-3628 Impact factor: 4.192