4.6 Article

Partitioning Nitrospira community structure and co-occurrence patterns in a long-term inorganic and organic fertilization soil

Journal

JOURNAL OF SOILS AND SEDIMENTS
Volume 21, Issue 2, Pages 1099-1108

Publisher

SPRINGER HEIDELBERG
DOI: 10.1007/s11368-020-02813-x

Keywords

Nitrospira; Nitrite oxidation; PNO; Soil aggregate; Long-term fertilization; Co-occurrence patterns

Funding

  1. National Key Research and Development Program of China [2018YFE0105600]
  2. National Natural Science Foundation of China [41830756]

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Organic fertilization can enhance soil potential nitrite oxidation activity, while different fertilization treatments have varying effects on Nitrospira abundance and community structure. The Nitrospira community structure shifts with fertilization types, but remains stable across different soil aggregate sizes.
Purpose Unraveling the drivers of the nitrogen cycling functional guilds variation in response to fertilizer management is a major goal in agroecosystem study. Nitrospira-like nitrite oxidizing bacteria can oxidize nitrite to nitrate, which play a critical role in the biogeochemical nitrogen cycle. However, how the Nitrospira community structure and co-occurrence patterns in a long-term inorganic and organic fertilization regimes within different soil aggregates have been largely unexplored. Materials and methods The soil samples were collected from a long-term (39-year) inorganic and organic fertilized agricultural ecosystem, including no-fertilizer (CK); mineral-fertilizer (NPK); manure-fertilizer (M); nitrogen-fertilizer (N); and M + N (MN). Three sizes of soil aggregate were manually fractionated by soil wet sieving technique with a series of meshes: (i) 2000-250 mu m (macroaggregates), (ii) 250-53 mu m (microaggregates), and (iii) < 53 mu m fractions (silt and clay). We performed qPCR and high-throughput-sequencing to assess the Nitrospira abundance and community structure, respectively. Results and discussion Organic fertilization (M and MN) efficiently increased soil potential nitrite oxidation activity (PNO), which was higher in the < 53 mu m than 250-53 mu m and followed the 2000-250 mu m fraction, than other treatments. All the fertilizer treatments resulted in a similar pattern, where the 250-53-mu m fraction had significantly greater Nitrospira abundance than the 2000-250 mu m and < 53 mu m fractions. The alpha diversity of Nitrosipra did not change in response to the fertilization treatments and soil aggregate sizes. Nitrospira community shifted in fertilization types, while not in aggregate sizes. Nitrospira community composition and abundance significantly correlated with PNO. Network analysis suggested that organic fertilizations (M and MN) promote the complexity of Nitrospira networks and possess higher connectivity than inorganic fertilization networks. Conclusions Our data suggested that fertilization strongly affected the Nitrospira community structure and co-occurrence patterns, which may implicate the importance of Nitrospira function in the nitrite oxidation process in soils with organic fertilization.

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