University of Oregon, Biology and the Built Environment Center, Eugene, Oregon, USA
Montana State University, Department of Land Resources and Environmental Sciences, Bozeman, Montana, USA.
mSphere. 2020 Jul 15;5(4):e00340-20. doi: 10.1128/mSphere.00340-20.
Little knowledge exists on how soil bacteria in agricultural settings are impacted by management practices and environmental conditions in current and predicted climate scenarios. We assessed the impact of soil moisture, soil temperature, weed communities, and disease status on soil bacterial communities in three cropping systems: (i) conventional no-till (CNT) systems utilizing synthetic pesticides and herbicides, (ii) USDA-certified tilled organic (OT) systems, and (iii) USDA-certified organic systems with sheep grazing (OG). Sampling date within the growing season and associated soil temperature and moisture exerted the greatest effect on bacterial communities, followed by cropping system, Wheat streak mosaic virus (WSMV) infection status, and weed community. Soil temperature was negatively correlated with bacterial richness and evenness, while soil moisture was positively correlated with bacterial richness and evenness. Soil temperature and soil moisture independently altered soil bacterial community similarity between treatments. Inoculation of wheat with WSMV altered the associated soil bacteria, and there were interactions between disease status and cropping system, sampling date, and climate conditions, indicating the effect of multiple stressors on bacterial communities in soil. In May and July, cropping system altered the effect of climate change on the bacterial community composition in hotter conditions and in hotter and drier conditions compared to ambient conditions, in samples not treated with WSMV. Overall, this study indicates that predicted climate modifications as well as biological stressors play a fundamental role in the impact of cropping systems on soil bacterial communities. Climate change is affecting global moisture and temperature patterns, and its impacts are predicted to worsen over time, posing progressively larger threats to food production. In the Northern Great Plains of the United States, climate change is forecast to increase temperature and decrease precipitation during the summer, and it is expected to negatively affect cereal crop production and pest management. In this study, temperature, soil moisture, weed communities, and disease status had interactive effects with cropping system on bacterial communities. As local climates continue to shift, the dynamics of above- and belowground associated biodiversity will also shift, which will impact food production and increase the need for more sustainable practices.
关于农业环境中土壤细菌如何受到当前和预测气候情景下管理实践和环境条件的影响,我们知之甚少。我们评估了土壤水分、土壤温度、杂草群落和疾病状况对三种种植系统中土壤细菌群落的影响:(i) 常规免耕 (CNT) 系统,使用合成农药和除草剂,(ii) USDA 认证的耕有机 (OT) 系统,和 (iii) USDA 认证的有机系统与绵羊放牧 (OG)。生长季节内的采样日期以及相关的土壤温度和水分对细菌群落的影响最大,其次是种植系统、小麦条纹花叶病毒 (WSMV) 感染状况和杂草群落。土壤温度与细菌丰富度和均匀度呈负相关,而土壤水分与细菌丰富度和均匀度呈正相关。土壤温度和土壤水分独立地改变了处理之间土壤细菌群落的相似性。用 WSMV 接种小麦改变了相关的土壤细菌,疾病状况和种植系统、采样日期和气候条件之间存在相互作用,表明多种胁迫源对土壤中细菌群落的影响。在 5 月和 7 月,与环境条件相比,在未用 WSMV 处理的样本中,种植系统改变了气候变化对较热条件和较热干燥条件下细菌群落组成的影响。总体而言,本研究表明,预测的气候变化以及生物胁迫源在种植系统对土壤细菌群落的影响中起着至关重要的作用。气候变化正在影响全球的湿度和温度模式,预计随着时间的推移,其影响会恶化,对粮食生产构成越来越大的威胁。在美国大平原北部,预计气候变化将导致夏季气温升高,降水减少,并预计将对谷物作物生产和害虫管理产生负面影响。在本研究中,温度、土壤水分、杂草群落和疾病状况与种植系统对细菌群落有相互作用。随着当地气候继续变化,地上和地下相关生物多样性的动态也将发生变化,这将影响粮食生产并增加对更可持续实践的需求。