Back to Search
Start Over
Dynamics, biodegradability, and microbial community shift of water-extractable organic matter in rice–wheat cropping soil under different fertilization treatments.
- Source :
- Environmental Pollution; Jun2019, Vol. 249, p686-695, 10p
- Publication Year :
- 2019
-
Abstract
- Although fertilization plays an important role in determining the contents of soil dissolved organic matters or water-extractable organic matter (DOM, WEOM), knowledge regarding the dynamics, biodegradability, and microbial community shifts of WEOM in response to different fertilization treatments is very limited, particularly in rice–wheat cropping soil. Thus, in the present study, we performed biodegradation experiments using WEOM extracted from samples of soil that had been subjected to four different fertilization treatments: unfertilized control (CK), chemical fertilizer (CF), 50% chemical fertilizer plus pig manure (PMCF), and 100% chemical fertilizer plus rice straw (SRCF). UV spectrum and fluorescence 3D excitation–emission matrix analyses applied to investigate the chemical composition of WEOM revealed that all examined WEOMs were derived from microbial activity and the dominant portion comprised humic acid-like compounds. After the incubation, 31.17, 31.63, 43.47, and 33.01% of soil WEOM from CK, CF, PMCF, and SRCF treatments, respectively, were biodegraded. PMCF- derived WEOM had the highest biodegradation rate. High-throughput sequencing analyses performed to determine the microbial community before and after the incubation indicated that Sphingomonas , Bacillus , and Flavisolibacter were the predominant bacterial genera in the original inoculum derived from the four fertilization treatments. Following biodegradation, we observed that the dominant bacteria differed according to fertilization treatments: Curvibacter (43.25%) and Sphingobium (10.47%) for CK, Curvibacter (29.68%) and Caulobacter (20.00%) for CF, Azospirillum (23.68%) and Caulobacter (13.29%) for PMCF, and Ralstonia (51.75%) for SRCF. Canonical correspondence analysis revealed that, shifts in the microbial community were closely correlated with pH and specific UV absorbance at 254 nm. We speculated that the inherent traits of different WEOM and the properties of soil solutions under different fertilization treatments shaped the soil microbial community structure, thereby influencing the biodegradation of WEOM. Image 1 • The dominant portion of the tested WEOM were humic acid-like compounds. • Fertilization influenced the dynamic and biodegradability of WEOM. • PMCF-derived WEOM had the highest biodegradation rate. • Diverse dominant bacteria utilized recalcitrant C from various fertilizer treatments. The paper revealed how fertilization treatments affect the decomposition of soil dissolved organic matters and the associated bacterial community. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
Details
- Language :
- English
- ISSN :
- 02697491
- Volume :
- 249
- Database :
- Supplemental Index
- Journal :
- Environmental Pollution
- Publication Type :
- Academic Journal
- Accession number :
- 136523898
- Full Text :
- https://doi.org/10.1016/j.envpol.2019.03.091