Changes in Bacterial and Fungal Soil Communities in Long-Term Organic Cropping Systems

Author:

Cuartero JessicaORCID,Özbolat Onurcan,Sánchez-Navarro Virginia,Egea-Cortines MarcosORCID,Zornoza RaúlORCID,Canfora LoredanaORCID,Orrù Luigi,Pascual Jose AntonioORCID,Vivo Juana-MaríaORCID,Ros MargaritaORCID

Abstract

Long-term organic farming aims to reduce synthetic fertilizer and pesticide use in order to sustainably produce and improve soil quality. To do this, there is a need for more information about the soil microbial community, which plays a key role in a sustainable agriculture. In this paper, we assessed the long-term effects of two organic and one conventional cropping systems on the soil microbial community structure using high-throughput sequencing analysis, as well as the link between these communities and the changes in the soil properties and crop yield. The results showed that the crop yield was similar among the three cropping systems. The microbial community changed according to cropping system. Organic cultivation with manure compost and compost tea (Org_C) showed a change in the bacterial community associated with an improved soil carbon and nutrient content. A linear discriminant analysis effect size showed different bacteria and fungi as key microorganisms for each of the three different cropping systems, for conventional systems (Conv), different microorganisms such as Nesterenkonia, Galbibacter, Gramella, Limnobacter, Pseudoalteromonas, Pantoe, and Sporobolomyces were associated with pesticides, while for Org_C and organic cultivation with manure (Org_M), other types of microorganisms were associated with organic amendments with different functions, which, in some cases, reduce soil borne pathogens. However, further investigations such as functional approaches or network analyses are need to better understand the mechanisms behind this behavior.

Funder

Horizon 2020

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Plant Science,Agronomy and Crop Science,Food Science

Reference89 articles.

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