Reduced tillage intensity does not increase arbuscular mycorrhizal fungal diversity in European long‐term experiments

Author:

Vahter Tanel1ORCID,Taylor Astrid R.2,Landa Blanca B.3,Linsler Deborah4,Rodriguez Engracia Maria Madejon3,Moreno Francisco Giron3,Pérès Guénola5,Engell Ilka4,Hiiesalu Inga1,Bengtsson Jan2,Oja Jane1,Torppa Kaisa A.2,Arias‐Giraldo Luis F.3,Guzmán Gema36,Potthoff Martin4,Vasar Martti1,Sandor Mignon7,Sepp Siim‐Kaarel1ORCID,Stoian Vlad7ORCID,Öpik Maarja1

Affiliation:

1. Institute of Ecology and Earth Sciences University of Tartu Tartu Estonia

2. Department of Ecology Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences Uppsala Sweden

3. Institute for Sustainable Agriculture CSIC Cordoba Spain

4. Center of Biodiversity and Sustainable Land Use (CBL) University of Göttingen Göttingen Germany

5. UMR SAS INRAe Institut Agro Rennes‐Angers Rennes Cedex France

6. Andalusian Institute of Agricultural and Fisheries Research and Training (IFAPA) Granada Spain

7. Department of Plant Culture‐Microbiology University of Agricultural Sciences and Veterinary Medicine Cluj‐Napoca Cluj‐Napoca Romania

Abstract

AbstractMechanical soil disturbance is one among the key factors influencing soil biodiversity in agriculture. Although many soil organisms are sensitive to soil disturbance, fungi could be highly impacted due to their sessile lifestyle, relatively slow growth and filamentous body structure. Arbuscular mycorrhizal (AM) fungi are of particular interest in arable lands, providing crop plants with numerous vital services such as nutrient acquisition and protection against abiotic and biotic stressors. Considering this, tillage practices that aim to reduce soil disturbance are often seen as a fungal‐friendly alternative to conventional inversion tillage. Although local studies exist on the impacts of minimal tillage practices on AM fungi, the universality of this approach has been debated. Our objective was to assess the effects of reduced tillage intensity on AM fungi in comparison with conventional tillage. Using high‐throughput sequencing techniques in long‐term field experiments in five European countries, we show that the effects of reduced tillage intensity may not necessarily be positive on soil AM fungal diversity. Plots which were tilled using reduced tillage techniques had lower AM fungal richness in three countries, whereas in one of them, no significant differences were found. We also observed a shift in AM fungal communities where prevalence of taxa preferring root colonisation rather than soil exploration increased under reduced tillage regimes. Here, we argue that more detailed and long‐term studies are needed to understand the factors that could make the reduction of soil disturbance more beneficial to AM fungi if agricultural sustainability goals are to be met.

Publisher

Wiley

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