人类受精
生物
农学
形成土
肥料
肥料
微生物种群生物学
土壤水分
野生种
细菌
生态学
遗传学
栖息地
作者
Martina Kracmarova,Jana Karpíšková,Ondrej Uhlik,Michal Strejcek,Jiřina Száková,J. Balík,Katerina Demnerova,Hana Stiborova
出处
期刊:Microorganisms
[MDPI AG]
日期:2020-09-08
卷期号:8 (9): 1377-1377
被引量:11
标识
DOI:10.3390/microorganisms8091377
摘要
An understanding of how fertilization influences endophytes is crucial for sustainable agriculture, since the manipulation of the plant microbiome could affect plant fitness and productivity. This study was focused on the response of microbial communities in the soil and tubers to the regular application of manure (MF; 330 kg N/ha), sewage sludge (SF; 330 and SF3x; 990 kg N/ha), and chemical fertilizer (NPK; 330-90-300 kg N-P-K/ha). Unfertilized soil was used as a control (CF), and the experiment was set up at two distinct sites. All fertilization treatments significantly altered the prokaryotic and fungal communities in soil, whereas the influence of fertilization on the community of endophytes differed for each site. At the site with cambisol, prokaryotic and fungal endophytes were significantly shifted by MF and SF3 treatments. At the site with chernozem, neither the prokaryotic nor fungal endophytic communities were significantly associated with fertilization treatments. Fertilization significantly increased the relative abundance of the plant-beneficial bacteria Stenotrophomonas, Sphingomonas and the arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi. In tubers, the relative abundance of Fusarium was lower in MF-treated soil compared to CF. Although fertilization treatments clearly influenced the soil and endophytic community structure, we did not find any indication of human pathogens being transmitted into tubers via organic fertilizers.
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