Inoculating native microorganisms improved soil function and altered the microbial composition of a degraded soil

Author:

Dadzie Frederick A.12ORCID,Moles Angela T.2,Erickson Todd E.34,Machado de Lima Nathali1,Muñoz‐Rojas Miriam15

Affiliation:

1. Centre for Ecosystem Science, School of Biological Earth and Environmental Sciences, UNSW Sydney, NSW 2052 Australia

2. Evolution and Ecology Research Centre, School of Biological, Earth and Environmental Sciences, UNSW Sydney, NSW 2052 Australia

3. Centre for Engineering Innovation: Agriculture and Ecological Restoration, School of Agriculture and Environment University of Western Australia Crawley, WA 6009 Australia

4. Kings Park Science, Department of Biodiversity Conservation and Attractions Kings Park, WA 6005 Australia

5. Departamento de Biologia Vegetal y Ecologia Universidad de Sevilla Sevilla 41002 Spain

Abstract

Restoration managers inoculate microorganisms to enhance soil function and improve restoration success, but the efficacy of these inoculations in real‐world conditions is still unclear. We conducted a field experiment to test whether applying extruded seed pellets inoculated with native microbes affected soil properties related to ecosystem function in severely degraded mine soil. We found that inoculating with bacteria did not affect soil carbon, metabolic quotient (a measure of microbial stress), or basal respiration, but increased soil nitrogen by 75%, substrate‐induced respiration by 147% and reduced carbon‐to‐nitrogen ratio by 44% compared to the control. This suggests that the bacteria inoculant contained free‐living N fixers that increased the soil N content. Thus, inoculating with bacteria could supplement nitrogen fertilizers in degraded soils during soil restoration. However, we found that inoculating with a mix of bacteria and cyanobacteria did not affect any of the soil properties. This finding is counter to results in laboratory studies, suggesting that field tests are critical for understanding real‐world outcomes of microbial inoculation. Finally, we found that soil microbial composition was changed by the inoculation with a mix of bacteria and cyanobacteria. None of the treatments significantly changed the diversity of soil microbial communities. Our data suggest that microbial inoculation could improve some aspects of ecosystem function and thus provide beneficial effects that might facilitate restoration of degraded sites.

Funder

Australian Research Council Centre of Excellence for Plant Success in Nature and Agriculture

Hermon Slade Foundation

Holsworth Wildlife Research Endowment

Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovación

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Nature and Landscape Conservation,Ecology,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

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