Journal article

Changes of soil-rhizosphere microbiota after organic amendment application in aHordeum vulgareL. short-term greenhouse experiment


Authors listObermeier, Michael M.; Minarsch, Eva-Maria L.; Raj, Abilash C. Durai; Rineau, Francois; Schroeder, Peter

Publication year2020

Pages489-506

JournalPlant and Soil

Volume number455

Issue number1-2

ISSN0032-079X

eISSN1573-5036

Open access statusHybrid

DOI Linkhttps://doi.org/10.1007/s11104-020-04637-7

PublisherSpringer


Abstract
Aims In order to counteract the enduring decreases in the quality of agricultural land, mechanistic studies for a more sustainable agricultural crop production were performed. They aimed to assess the effects of organic amendments in combination with mineral fertilizer on soil-rhizosphere microbiota and their influence on soil health and plant performance. Methods In a short-term greenhouse experiment, the effects of pelletized spent mushroom substrate, with different combinations of biochar and mineral fertilizer, on agricultural soil and performance ofHordeum vulgareL were scrutinized. To evaluate improved soil quality, different soil biological and chemical properties, microbial activity, bacterial diversity and plant performance were assessed. Results Plant performance increased across all fertilizer combinations. Bacterial beta-diversity changed from the initial to the final sampling, pointing at a strong influence of plant development on the rhizosphere with increasing abundances ofAcidobacteriaand decreasing abundances ofActinobacteria, Chloroflexi, andBacteroidetes. Microbial activity (FDA), potential enzyme activity and metabolic diversity of the microbial community (BIOLOG) were not affected by the amendments, whereas bacterial community structure changed on family level, indicating functional redundancy. Treatments containing biochar and the highest amount of mineral fertilizer (B_MF140) caused the strongest changes, which were most pronounced for the familiesXanthobacteraceae, Mycobacteriaceae,andHaliangiaceae. Conclusion Applying organic amendments improved plant performance and maintained soil health, contributing to more sustainable crop production. Nevertheless, long-term field studies are recommended to verify the findings of this short-term experiment.



Citation Styles

Harvard Citation styleObermeier, M., Minarsch, E., Raj, A., Rineau, F. and Schroeder, P. (2020) Changes of soil-rhizosphere microbiota after organic amendment application in aHordeum vulgareL. short-term greenhouse experiment, Plant and Soil, 455(1-2), pp. 489-506. https://doi.org/10.1007/s11104-020-04637-7

APA Citation styleObermeier, M., Minarsch, E., Raj, A., Rineau, F., & Schroeder, P. (2020). Changes of soil-rhizosphere microbiota after organic amendment application in aHordeum vulgareL. short-term greenhouse experiment. Plant and Soil. 455(1-2), 489-506. https://doi.org/10.1007/s11104-020-04637-7



Keywords


BACTERIAL COMMUNITY STRUCTUREBiological soil quality indicesENZYME-ACTIVITIESFUMIGATION-EXTRACTION METHODOrganic amendmentsSoil extracellular enzyme activitySPENT MUSHROOM SUBSTRATE

Last updated on 2025-10-06 at 11:14