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Cropland‐to‐Miscanthus conversion alters soil bacterial and archaeal communities influencing N‐cycle in Northern China

Authors :
Chunqiao Zhao
Xiaona Li
Yuesen Yue
Xincun Hou
Qiang Guo
Jinku Song
Cui Li
Weiwei Zhang
Chao Wang
Yanhui Hou
Ranran Fan
Ruishuang Shi
Xifeng Fan
Juying Wu
Source :
GCB Bioenergy, Vol 13, Iss 9, Pp 1528-1544 (2021)
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Wiley, 2021.

Abstract

Abstract Miscanthus spp. are increasingly cultivated in cropland worldwide due to their bioenergy potential and multiple ecological services. Effects of long‐term cropland‐to‐Miscanthus conversion without N fertilizer on soil microbiome and N cycling largely remain unknown. We aimed to explore the effects of Miscanthus conversion on soil microbiome and N cycling over a 15‐year period. We analyzed diversity, composition, and abundance of bacterial and archaeal communities using 16S rRNA amplicon sequencing, and abundances of N‐cycling‐related genes using quantitative polymerase chain reaction of 0–10 cm soils collected from bare land, cropland, 10‐year Miscanthus × giganteus, and 15‐year Miscanthus sacchriflorus land in Beijing. Conversion decreased soil sand and micro‐aggregate proportion, nitrate N (NiN), available phosphorus levels, conductivity, temperature, and pH, while increasing proportion of soil clay and macro‐aggregate (MAA), soil organic C (SOC), available N (AN), exchangeable Mg2+ (EMg2+), and available potassium (AK) contents as well as microbial C/N. Consequently, diversity, composition, and abundance of soil bacterial community exhibited larger changes than those values of archaeal community after conversion. Soil AP, EMg2+, AK, and SOC were key factors in shifting microbiome from the cropland to Miscanthus pattern. Moreover, abundances of bacterial and archaeal communities and the N fixer gene nifH increased, whereas that of the bacterial ammonia monooxygenase gene decreased. The copies of other N‐cycling‐related genes in the two Miscanthus lands seemed similar to those values of cropland. The nifH copies negatively correlated with soil NiN and positively correlated with AN, EMg2+, ECa2+, SOC, AK, and MAA. We conclude that changes in soil microbiome pattern induced by the variation of soil properties enhance microbial N fixation potential, maintaining stable N levels and robust N cycling with lower N leakage risk after conversion. These results should inspire farmers and governments to large‐scale use Miscanthus on marginal cropland in Northern China.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
17571707 and 17571693
Volume :
13
Issue :
9
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
GCB Bioenergy
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.47c22ac286c44487ac91a120d811df59
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1111/gcbb.12874