Arcand Melissa M, Levy-Booth David J, Helgason Bobbi L
Department of Soil Science, University of Saskatchewan, Saskatoon, SK, Canada.
Department of Microbiology and Immunology, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, BC, Canada.
Front Microbiol. 2017 Nov 27;8:2293. doi: 10.3389/fmicb.2017.02293. eCollection 2017.
Long-term contrasts in agricultural management can shift soil resource availability with potential consequences to microbial carbon (C) use efficiency (CUE) and the fate of C in soils. Isothermal calorimetry was combined with C-labeled glucose stable isotope probing (SIP) of 16S rRNA genes to test the hypothesis that organically managed soils would support microbial communities with greater thermodynamic efficiency compared to conventional soils due to a legacy of lower resource availability and a resultant shift toward communities supportive of more oligotrophic taxa. Resource availability was greater in conventionally managed soils, with 3.5 times higher available phosphorus, 5% more nitrate, and 36% more dissolved organic C. The two management systems harbored distinct glucose-utilizing populations of and , with a higher : ratio (2.4 vs. 0.7) in conventional soils. Organically managed soils also harbored notable activity of . Thermodynamic efficiency indices were similar between soils, indicating that glucose was metabolized at similar energetic cost. However, differentially abundant glucose utilizers in organically managed soils were positively correlated with soil organic matter (SOM) priming and negatively correlated to soil nutrient and carbon availability, respiration, and heat production. These correlation patterns were strongly reversed in the conventionally managed soils indicating clear differentiation of microbial functioning related to soil resource availability. Fresh C addition caused proportionally more priming of SOM decomposition (57 vs. 51%) in organically managed soils likely due to mineralization of organic nutrients to satisfy microbial demands during glucose utilization in these more resource deprived soils. The additional heat released from SOM oxidation may explain the similar community level thermodynamic efficiencies between management systems. Restoring fertility to soils with a legacy of nutrient limitation requires a balanced supply of both nutrients and energy to protect stable SOM from microbial degradation. These results highlight the need to consider managing C for the energy it provides to ıcritical biological processes that underpin soil health.
长期的农业管理差异会改变土壤资源的可利用性,对微生物碳(C)利用效率(CUE)以及土壤中碳的归宿产生潜在影响。等温滴定量热法与16S rRNA基因的C标记葡萄糖稳定同位素探测(SIP)相结合,以检验以下假设:由于资源可利用性较低的遗留影响以及由此导致的向支持更多贫营养类群的群落转变,有机管理的土壤将比传统土壤支持具有更高热力学效率的微生物群落。传统管理的土壤中资源可利用性更高,有效磷含量高3.5倍,硝酸盐多5%,溶解有机碳多36%。这两种管理系统中存在不同的利用葡萄糖的菌群,传统土壤中的革兰氏阳性菌与革兰氏阴性菌比例更高(2.4比0.7)。有机管理的土壤中也存在显著的放线菌活性。两种土壤的热力学效率指标相似,表明葡萄糖代谢的能量成本相似。然而,有机管理土壤中不同丰度的葡萄糖利用菌与土壤有机质(SOM)激发效应呈正相关,与土壤养分、碳的可利用性、呼吸作用和热量产生呈负相关。在传统管理的土壤中,这些相关模式强烈逆转,表明与土壤资源可利用性相关的微生物功能存在明显差异。在有机管理的土壤中,添加新鲜碳导致SOM分解的激发效应比例更高(57%对51%),这可能是由于在这些资源匮乏的土壤中,有机养分矿化以满足葡萄糖利用过程中的微生物需求。SOM氧化释放的额外热量可能解释了不同管理系统之间群落水平热力学效率相似的原因。对于因养分限制而遗留问题的土壤,恢复肥力需要平衡供应养分和能量,以保护稳定的SOM不被微生物降解。这些结果凸显了在管理碳时需要考虑其为支撑土壤健康的关键生物过程提供的能量。