4.6 Article

Fertiliser use has multi-decadal effects on microbial diversity and functionality of forest soils

期刊

APPLIED SOIL ECOLOGY
卷 163, 期 -, 页码 -

出版社

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.apsoil.2021.103964

关键词

Sustainability; Pinus radiata; Planted forest; Bacteria; Fungi; Soil fertility; Land-use legacy

资金

  1. Growing Confidence in Forestry's Future research programme - Ministry for Business Innovation and Employment (MBIE) [C04X1306]
  2. Growing Confidence in Forestry's Future research programme - New Zealand Forest Growers Levy Trust Inc. [C04X1306]
  3. New Zealand Forest Owners Association (FOA)
  4. New Zealand Farm Forestry Association (FFA)

向作者/读者索取更多资源

The productivity and sustainability of planted forest ecosystems are closely related to soil nutrients and the microbiome. This study investigates the long-term effects of land-use history on soil microbial communities and their responses to management practices. The findings suggest that past land-use can have lasting impacts on microbial communities and their ability to adapt to changes in the environment.
The productivity and sustainability of planted forest ecosystems are dependent on the provision of soil nutrients and nutrient cycling. In turn, these are supported by the microbiome present in soils and their interactions with the wider biotic and abiotic environments (i.e. expression of microbiome x edaphic x management x environment interactions). This study aims to explore the extent of management-induced disruption on the soil microbiome and how this disruption in turn impacts the microbiome's future ability to respond to environmental change. This was tested by determining if land-use prior to afforestation, had an enduring effect on the soil microbial community responses to the management practices typically employed in plantation forestry. Samples were collected from the Berwick long-term site productivity (LTSP) trial at the end of a second rotation of Pinus radiata (similar to 60 years in continuous forestry). Prior to afforestation the land-use had been pastoral farming to support livestock production. Forestry operation treatments associated with the removal of organic matter (tree and residue management) and the use of fertilisers had no significant long-term effect on bacterial or fungal microbial communities. However, when comparisons were made with similar LTSP sites that had no history of pastoral farming history, significant variations in microbiome properties were apparent with significantly higher total abundance of ectomycorrhizal species (ECM) at the site with a pastoral history. We suggest that that ecological memory associated with the initial states of the sites drove the differing response of the microbial communities to the fertiliser additions used to remove nutrient limitations for the growing P. radiata crop. Essentially, the closer a site was to this nutrient threshold, the less the sensitivity of the microbiome; therefore, at the more nutrient rich ex-pasture site the habitat conditions were re-enforced by fertiliser use rather than being changed by it.

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