| Literature DB >> 35526398 |
Yonglei Jiang1, Jing Zhang2, Delgado-Baquerizo Manuel3, Michiel Op de Beeck4, Muhammad Shahbaz4, Yi Chen1, Xiaopeng Deng1, Zhaoli Xu1, Jian Li5, Zhanfeng Liu2.
Abstract
Identifying field management practices to promote crop production, while conserving soil health is essential to maintain long-term food production in a changing world. Also, providing experimental evidence to support the use of traditional agricultural practices is necessary to secure sustainable agriculture. Here, we conducted a long-term 12-year experiment to investigate the impact of different combinations of fertilization type (control, inorganic fertilizer, organic fertilizer) and cropping regimes (continuous cropping and rotation cropping) on the crop (tobacco) production and multiple soil attributes associated with soil health, including proportions of soil-borne pathogens and decomposers, soil microbial diversity, microbial network stability and biomass, nutrient pools and microbial resource limitations. Our long-term experiment supports that the combination of organic fertilizer with rotation cropping increased crop production by at least 40% compared to the other management combinations and improved soil nutrient pools (e.g. the content of soil organic matter), improved the relative proportion of soil decomposers, and promoted bacterial and fungal network stability and biodiversity. Furthermore, this combination treatment relieved microbial resource limitation and reduced the abundance of potential fungal plant pathogens by at least 20% compared to other management combinations. In summary, we provide experimental evidence to support that the combined use of organic fertilization and rotation cropping management can help maintain long-term soil health, crop production, and economic outputs.Entities:
Keywords: Microbial biodiversity; Network stability; Organic fertilizer; Rotation cropping; Soil nutrient pools; Soil pathogen
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35526398 DOI: 10.1016/j.jenvman.2022.115190
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Environ Manage ISSN: 0301-4797 Impact factor: 6.789