Influence of high-carbon basal fertiliser on the structure and composition of a soil microbial community under tobacco cultivation |
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Authors: | Song-tao Zhang Xiao-ning Song Ning Li Ke Zhang Guo-shun Liu Xue-dong Li Zhi-zhong Wang Xiao-bing He Guo-feng Wang Hui-fang Shao |
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Affiliation: | 1. Henan Agricultural University, College of Tobacco Science, Tobacco Cultivation Key Laboratory of China Tobacco, Zhengzhou 450002, China;2. China Tobacco Chongqing Industrial Corporation, Chongqing 400000, China;3. Wuyang County Tobacco Branch of Luohe Tobacco Company, Luohe 462000, China |
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Abstract: | Soil microorganisms play a crucial role in cycling soil nutrients and providing organic nutrients for plant growth and development. Fertilisation balances soil fertility and quality, and affects soil microbial communities. Fertilisation is a frontier subject in agricultural and environmental sciences. Here we showed that the application of high-carbon basal fertiliser treatment could improve the tobacco yield and quality when compared to chemical fertiliser, high-carbon basal fertiliser and mixed high-carbon chemical fertiliser. The potential reason is that different fertiliser treatments influence soil fertility, such as nitrogen, phosphorus, and other contents, besides soil organic matter. Further experiments revealed that populations of bacteria, fungi and actinomycetes fluctuated during tobacco development under different fertilisation treatments. Then we performed high-throughput sequencing of the 16S rRNA gene, and the results showed that the fertilisation treatments had significant effects on the microbial community, particularly within the finer taxonomic divisions or non-dominant taxa. Moreover, proteobacteria and fungal genera had significantly different relative abundances during tobacco growth under various tobacco developmental stages and fertilisation treatments. These results indicated that mixed high-carbon chemical fertiliser could improve soil fertility by influencing the soil microorganism, and that the fertilisation treatments impacted on the structure and composition of the microbial community, and especially the diversity of non-dominant taxa. However, more studies are needed to confirm their reliability. |
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Keywords: | High-carbon basal fertiliser Soil microbial community Tobacco Growth stage |
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