Subtle responses of soil bacterial communities to corn-soybean-wheat rotation

Abstract

Crop rotational diversity can improve crop productivity, soil health, and boost soil microbial diversity. This research hypothesized that a three-year rotation of corn-soybean-wheat (CSW), compared to a two-year corn-soybean (CS) rotation, would result in a more diverse and more complex soil bacterial community, together with a greater abundance of beneficial bacteria. This was evaluated in a replicated experiment established in 2013 at two locations in Ohio (USA). The soil bacterial communities under soybean were compared between CS and CSW, at both studied sites, in 2018 and 2019, through 16S rDNA amplicon metabarcoding. Experimental site was the main driver of bacterial richness and evenness. Significant effects on bacterial community composition were observed in response to the interaction between site, rotational sequence, and year of study. Eight bacterial ASVs were identified within all CSW treatments and were not present in CS. Several taxa were differentially abundant between rotation treatments, including the genera Ralstonia being more abundant in CS. Co-occurrence networks, including hub taxa, were generally different between rotation treatments and year, with more structure observed in CSW networks for one of the studies sites. Few bacterial genera were consistently identified as hubs across all networks, including an unidentified Acidobacteriales, while other hubs were unique for CSW networks, including members of the family Gemmatimonadaceae. Finally, the composition of the bacterial communities at the northwestern site positively correlated with plant biomass and active carbon, whereas more recalcitrant pools (total C and organic water) correlated with the bacterial communities at the western site.

Publication
Phytobiomes
Antonino Malacrinò
Antonino Malacrinò
Assistant Professor

I’m a molecular ecologist interested in plant-microorganism interaction.