4.7 Article

Soil Sickness in Aged Tea Plantation Is Associated With a Shift in Microbial Communities as a Result of Plant Polyphenol Accumulation in the Tea Gardens

Journal

FRONTIERS IN PLANT SCIENCE
Volume 11, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/fpls.2020.00601

Keywords

indirect allelopathy; catechins; soil sickness; monoculture problems; plant polyphenol

Categories

Funding

  1. National Key Research and Development Plan [2017YFE0121800]
  2. National Key Research and Development (RD), China Plan [2016YFD0200900]
  3. FujianTaiwan Joint Innovative Centre for Germplasm Resources and Cultivation of Crop (Fujian 2011 Program, China) [2015-75]
  4. 948 programs from the Ministry of Agriculture China [2014-Z360]

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In conventional tea plantations, a large amount of pruned material returns to the soil surface, putting a high quantity of polyphenols into the soil. The accumulation of active allelochemicals in the tea rhizosphere and subsequent shift in beneficial microbes may be the cause of acidification, soil sickness, and regeneration problem, which may be attributed to hindrance of plant growth, development, and low yield in long-term monoculture tea plantation. However, the role of pruning leaf litter in soil sickness under consecutive tea monoculture is unclear. Here, we investigated soil samples taken from conventional tea gardens of different ages (2, 15, and 30 years) and under the effect of regular pruning. Different approaches including liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry (LC-MS) analysis of the leaf litter, metagenomic study of root-associated bacterial communities, andin vitrointeraction of polyphenols with selected bacteria were applied to understand the effect of leaf litter-derived polyphenols on the composition and structure of the tea rhizosphere microbial community. Our results indicated that each pruning practice returns a large amount of leaf litter to each tea garden. LC-MS results showed that leaf litter leads to the accumulation of various allelochemicals in the tea rhizosphere, includingepigallocatechin gallate,epigallocatechin,epicatechin gallate,catechin, andepicatechinwith increasing age of the tea plantation. Meanwhile, in the tea garden grown consecutively for 30 years (30-Y), the phenol oxidase and peroxidase activities increased significantly. Pyrosequencing identifiedBurkholderiaandPseudomonasas the dominant genera, while plant growth-promoting bacteria, especiallyBacillus,Prevotella, andSphingomonas, were significantly reduced in the long-term tea plantation. The qPCR results of 30-Y soil confirmed that the copy numbers of bacterial genes per gram of the rhizosphere soil were significantly reduced, while that ofPseudomonasincreased significantly.In vitrostudy showed that the growth of catechin-degrading bacteria (e.g.,Pseudomonas) increased and plant-promoting bacteria (e.g.,Bacillus) decreased significantly with increasing concentration of these allelochemicals. Furthermore,in vitrointeraction showed a 0.36-fold decrease in the pH of the broth after 72 h with the catechin degradation. In summary, the increase ofPseudomonasandBurkholderiain the 30-Y garden was found to be associated with the accumulation of catechin substrates. In response to the long-term monoculture of tea, the variable soil pH along with the litter distribution negatively affect the population of plant growth-promoting bacteria (e.g.,Sphingomonas,Bacillus, andPrevotella). Current research suggests that the removal of pruned branches from tea gardens can prevent soil sickness and may lead to sustainable tea production.

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