Loading…

Does fresh farmyard manure introduce surviving microbes into soil or activate soil-borne microbiota?

Manure inputs into soil strongly affect soil microbial communities leading to shifts in microbial diversity and activity. It is still not clear whether these effects are caused mainly by the survival of microbes introduced with manure or by activation of the soil-borne microbiome. Here, we investiga...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Published in:Journal of environmental management 2021-09, Vol.294, p.113018-113018, Article 113018
Main Authors: Semenov, Mikhail V., Krasnov, George S., Semenov, Vyacheslav M., Ksenofontova, Natalia, Zinyakova, Natalia B., van Bruggen, Ariena H.C.
Format: Article
Language:English
Subjects:
Citations: Items that this one cites
Items that cite this one
Online Access:Get full text
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
Description
Summary:Manure inputs into soil strongly affect soil microbial communities leading to shifts in microbial diversity and activity. It is still not clear whether these effects are caused mainly by the survival of microbes introduced with manure or by activation of the soil-borne microbiome. Here, we investigated how the soil microbiome was changed after the introduction of fresh farmyard cattle manure, and which microorganisms originating from manure survived in soil. Manure addition led to a strong increase in soil microbial biomass, gene copies abundances, respiration activity, and diversity. High-throughput sequencing analysis showed that higher microbial diversity in manured soil was caused mainly by activation of 113 soil-borne microbial genera which were mostly minor taxa in not-fertilized soil. Two weeks after manure input, 78% of the manure-associated genera were not detected anymore. Only 15 of 237 prokaryotic genera that originated from manure survived for 144 days in soil, and only 8 of them (primarily representatives of Clostridia class) were found in manured soil after winter. Thus, an increase in microbial biomass and diversity after manure input is caused mainly by activation of soil-borne microbial communities, while most exogenous microbes from manure do not survive in soil conditions after few months. [Display omitted] •Manure addition increased soil microbial biomass, gene abundances, and respiration.•Manure input activated minor soil-borne taxa and increased microbial diversity.•Most exogenous manure microbes do not survive in soil conditions after few months.•Soil acts as an effective buffer against incoming microorganisms.
ISSN:0301-4797
1095-8630
DOI:10.1016/j.jenvman.2021.113018