Author:
Kraut-Cohen Judith,Zolti Avihai,Rotbart Nativ,Bar-Tal Asher,Laor Yael,Medina Shlomit,Shawahna Raneen,Saadi Ibrahim,Raviv Michael,Green Stefan J,Yermiyahu Uri,Minz Dror
Abstract
AbstractOrganic amendment, and especially the use of composts, is a well-accepted sustainable agricultural practice. Compost increases soil carbon and microbial biomass, changes enzymatic activity, and enriches soil carbon and nitrogen stocks. However, relatively little is known about the immediate and long-term temporal dynamics of agricultural soil microbial communities following repeated compost applications. Our study was conducted at two field sites: Newe Ya’ar (NY, Mediterranean climate) and Gilat (G, semi-arid climate), both managed organically over 4 years under either conventional fertilization (0, zero compost) or three levels of compost amendment (20, 40 and 60 m3/ha or 2, 4, 6 L/m2). Microbial community dynamics in the soils was examined by high-and low-time-resolution analyses. Annual community composition in compost-amended soils was significantly affected by compost amendment levels in G (first, second and third years) and in NY (third year). Repeated sampling at high resolution (9–10 times over 1 year) showed that at both sites, compost application initially induced a strong shift in microbial communities, lasting for up to 1 month, followed by a milder response. Compost application significantly elevated alpha diversity at both sites, but differed in the compost–dose correlation effect. We demonstrate higher abundance of taxa putatively involved in organic decomposition and characterized compost-related indicator taxa and a compost-derived core microbiome at both sites. Overall, this study describes temporal changes in the ecology of soil microbiomes in response to compost vs. conventional fertilization.HighlightsDose-dependent changes in soil microbiome structure by manure compost applicationDynamic short-and long-term changes in soil microbiomes by compost amendmentClimate, soil properties and management influence compost-amendment effectsImmediate and temporal cumulative effects of compost on soil α and β diversity
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory