Long-term fertilization influences community assembly processes of soil diazotrophs

In this study, we investigated soil diazotrophic communities under different long-term (30 years) fertilization managements, using Illumina MiSeq sequencing. Long-term chemical fertilization significantly changed soil diazotrophic community structure and resulted in the decrease of diazotrophic diversity, while the addition of livestock manure could maintain the diversity. Diazotrophic community structure and diversity were mostly correlated with soil pH. Deterministic processes structured diazotrophic communities in both unfertilized and fertilized soils. However, the deterministic selection of phylogenetically non-conserved traits increased phylogenetic randomness in all fertilized treatments. These trends for diazotrophs differed from those for the entire bacterial community, which was structured through deterministic processes and exhibited phylogenetic nonrandomness in unfertilized and fertilized soils. Taken together, our results indicated that long-term fertilization strongly affected the diversity, community structure and assembly processes of soil diazotrophs, which may have implications for the rate of N2 fixation in agricultural systems.
Source: Soil Biology and Biochemistry - Category: Biology Source Type: research