University of California Berkeley, Department of Integrative Biology, Berkeley, California, USA.
USDA, Agricultural Research Service, Western Regional Research Center, Crop Improvement and Genetics Research Unit, Albany, California, USA.
Appl Environ Microbiol. 2022 Apr 12;88(7):e0004922. doi: 10.1128/aem.00049-22. Epub 2022 Mar 21.
Food crops are grown with fertilizers containing nitrogen, phosphorus, and potassium (macronutrients) along with magnesium, calcium, boron, and zinc (micronutrients) at different ratios during their cultivation. Soil and plant-associated microbes have been implicated to promote plant growth, stress tolerance, and productivity. However, the high degree of variability across agricultural environments makes it difficult to assess the possible influences of nutrient fertilizers on these microbial communities. Uncovering the underlying mechanisms could lead us to achieve consistently improved food quality and productivity with minimal environmental impacts. For this purpose, we tested a commercially available fertilizer (surface-mined volcanic ash deposit Azomite) applied as a supplement to the normal fertilizer program of greenhouse-grown tomato plants. Because this treatment showed a significant increase in fruit production at measured intervals, we examined its impact on the composition of below-ground microbial communities, focusing on members identified as "core taxa" that were enriched in the rhizosphere and root endosphere compared to bulk soil and appeared above their predicted neutral distribution levels in control and treated samples. This analysis revealed that Azomite had little effect on microbial composition overall, but it had a significant, temporally selective influence on the core taxa. Changes in the composition of the core taxa were correlated with computationally inferred changes in functional pathway enrichment associated with carbohydrate metabolism, suggesting a shift in available microbial nutrients within the roots. This finding exemplifies how the nutrient environment can specifically alter the functional capacity of root-associated bacterial taxa, with the potential to improve crop productivity. Various types of soil fertilizers are used routinely to increase crop yields globally. The effects of these treatments are assessed mainly by the benefits they provide in increased crop productivity. There exists a gap in our understanding of how soil fertilizers act on the plant-associated microbial communities. The underlying mechanisms of nutrient uptake are widely complex and, thus, difficult to evaluate fully but have critical influences on both soil and plant health. Here, we presented a systematic approach to analyzing the effects of fertilizer on core microbial communities in soil and plants, leading to predictable outcomes that can be empirically tested and used to develop simple and affordable field tests. The methods described here can be used for any fertilizer and crop system. Continued effort in advancing our understanding of how fertilizers affect plant and microbe relations is needed to advance scientific understanding and help growers make better-informed decisions.
在种植过程中,农作物会使用含有氮、磷、钾(大量营养素)以及镁、钙、硼、锌(微量营养素)的肥料,以不同的比例进行施肥。土壤和植物相关的微生物被认为可以促进植物生长、提高抗逆性和生产力。然而,由于农业环境的高度变异性,很难评估营养肥料对这些微生物群落的可能影响。揭示潜在的机制可以使我们在最小化环境影响的情况下,持续提高食物质量和生产力。为此,我们测试了一种市售的肥料(地表开采的火山灰矿床 Azomite),作为温室种植番茄植物正常肥料方案的补充。由于这种处理在测量间隔内显著增加了果实产量,我们研究了它对地下微生物群落组成的影响,重点关注在根际和根内圈中富集的被鉴定为“核心分类群”的成员,与大量土壤相比,它们在对照和处理样本中的丰度高于预测的中性分布水平。这项分析表明,Azomite 总体上对微生物组成的影响很小,但它对核心分类群有显著的、时间选择性的影响。核心分类群组成的变化与计算推断的与碳水化合物代谢相关的功能途径富集的变化相关,这表明根内可用微生物养分发生了变化。这一发现例证了营养环境如何特异性地改变与根相关的细菌分类群的功能能力,从而有可能提高作物的生产力。 全球范围内,各种类型的土壤肥料被常规用于提高作物产量。这些处理的效果主要通过它们在提高作物生产力方面提供的益处来评估。我们对土壤肥料如何作用于与植物相关的微生物群落的理解存在差距。养分吸收的潜在机制广泛复杂,因此难以全面评估,但对土壤和植物健康都有至关重要的影响。在这里,我们提出了一种系统的方法来分析肥料对土壤和植物中核心微生物群落的影响,得出可预测的结果,可以通过经验测试,并用于开发简单且负担得起的田间测试。这里描述的方法可以用于任何肥料和作物系统。为了推进我们对肥料如何影响植物和微生物关系的理解,需要继续努力,以帮助种植者做出更明智的决策。