Spatio-temporal microbial regulation of aggregate-associated priming effects under contrasting tillage practices

Yeye Zhang, Yunfei Ren, Shenglin Zhou, Xiaoyu Ning,Xiukang Wang,Yanming Yang,Shikun Sun, Nangia Vinay,Michael Bahn, Juan Han,Yang Liu,Youcai Xiong,Yuncheng Liao,Fei Mo

Science of The Total Environment(2024)

引用 0|浏览0
暂无评分
摘要
The heterogeneous distribution and dynamic changes of soil microorganisms are important drivers of spatio-temporal patterns of SOC decomposition, which are highly sensitive to tillage intensity in agroecosystems. However, little is known about the microbial mechanisms by which tillage intensity regulates the priming effect (PE) dynamics in heterogeneous spatial environments such as aggregates. Herein, a microcosm was established by adding 13C-labeled straw residue to three distinct aggregate-size classes (i.e., mega-, macro-, and micro-aggregates) from two long-term contrasting tillage histories (no-till [NT] and conventional plow tillage [CT]) for 160 days to observe the spatio-temporal variations in PE. Metagenomic sequencing and Fourier transform mid-infrared techniques were used to assess the relative importance of C-degrading functional genes, microbial community succession, and SOC chemical composition in aggregate-associated PE dynamics during straw decomposition. Spatially, straw addition induced a positive PE for all aggregates, with stronger PE occurring in larger aggregates, especially in CT soil compared to NT soil. Larger aggregates have more unique microbial communities enriched in genes for simple C degradation (e.g., E5.1.3.6, E2.4.1.7, pmm-pgm, and KduD in Nitrosospeera and Burkholderia), supporting the higher short-term PE; however, the CT soils harbored more genes for complex C degradation (e.g., TSTA3, fcl, pmm-pgm, and K06871 in Gammaproteobacteria and Phycicoccus), supporting a stronger long-term PE. Temporally, soil aggregates dominated early-stage PEs (i.e., < 59 days after residue addition) through co-metabolism and nitrogen (N) mining, as evidenced by the increased microbial biomass C and dissolved organic C (DOC) and reduced inorganic N with increasing aggregate-size class. At a later stage, however, the legacy effect of tillage histories controlled the PEs via microbial stoichiometry decomposition, as suggested by the higher DOC-to-inorganic N and DOC-to-available P stoichiometries in CT than NT. Our study underscores the importance of including both spatial and temporal microbial dynamics to fully understand the mechanisms of SOC priming, particularly under long-term contrasting tillage practices.
更多
查看译文
关键词
Priming effect,No-till,Aggregate,Soil organic carbon,Soil microbial community,Carbon functional genes
AI 理解论文
溯源树
样例
生成溯源树,研究论文发展脉络
Chat Paper
正在生成论文摘要