4.6 Article

Microbial crop residue decomposition dynamics in organic and conventionally managed soils

期刊

APPLIED SOIL ECOLOGY
卷 107, 期 -, 页码 347-359

出版社

ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
DOI: 10.1016/j.apsoil.2016.07.001

关键词

Microbial community composition; C utilization; C-13-PLFA-SIP; Extracellular enzyme activity; Residue decomposition; Agriculture

资金

  1. Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada

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Agricultural practices can influence soil microbial communities, which are the primary regulators of soil carbon and nutrient cycling processes. Differences in microbial community composition have the potential to affect the fate of carbon and nutrients during decomposition and may therefore influence the retention of C and provisioning of crop nutrients in agroecosystems. Long term management-induced shifts in microbial communities and resource availability may interact to affect the microbial utilization of fresh inputs of crop residues in the short term, with lasting impacts on soil C accrual and fertility. The objective of this study was to investigate whether long-term organic and conventional management resulted in differences in microbial residue decomposition. Soils under conventional and organic management planted with annual crops or with a mix of annual crops and three years of perennial alfalfa were collected from a long-term (19 y) field study in Saskatchewan, Canada and were incubated in the laboratory with and without C-13-labelled barley residues for 98 d. We measured extracellular enzyme activities (EEAs) and the incorporation of crop residue-derived C within major microbial groups (fungi, actinobacteria, and Gram positive and negative bacteria) during decomposition. Total PLFA biomass and EEAs were highest in soils from the conventional-annual system, similar between the conventional and organic perennial systems, and similar or lowest in the organic-annual system. Crop residue additions alleviated these differences; that is, in residue-amended soils total PLFA biomass, EEAs, and the abundance of the fungal biomarker increased in the organic systems compared to the unamended soils to become similar to the conventional systems. In contrast, residue additions induced small or no changes in biomass and EEAs in the conventional-annual soils. Using C-13-PLFA-SIP we showed that the general pattern of microbial succession during decomposition was similar among soils, but that fungi and especially actinobacteria were relatively more dominant in organic compared to conventionally managed soils during early and later stages of decomposition, respectively. Thus, shifts in the decomposer community composition were greater in soils originating from organic management, possibly as a result of larger changes in resource availability during the incubation that advanced the rate of microbial succession. This may reinforce long term differences in SOC quality and nutrient availability between management regimes. Organically-managed cropping systems are particularly reliant on biological cycling of organic nutrients to support crop growth. This work reinforces the importance of adequate crop residue returns for maintaining soil function, particularly where external organic amendments are not applied to balance nutrients exported as crop products. Crown Copyright (C) 2016 Published by Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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