Abstract

We assessed the effect of exposing apple orchard soil to different temperatures and CO2 levels on the resident microbiome of soils from a conventionally managed and an organically managed apple orchard. The key difference between these two orchards was that synthetic fertilizers and pesticides are routinely used in the former one. To investigate the effect of CO2 and temperature, soil samples from each site at two depths were exposed to either elevated temperature (29°C) at either 5000 or 10 000ppm for five weeks or control conditions (25°C + 400ppm). Both bacterial and fungal communities were profiled with amplicon-sequencing. The differences between the two orchards were the most significant factor affecting the bacterial and fungal communities, contributing to 53.7-14.0% of the variance in Bray-Curtis β diversity, respectively. Elevated CO2 concentration and increased temperature affected organic orchard microbial diversity more than the conventionally managed orchard. A number of candidate beneficial and pathogenic microorganisms had differential abundances when temperature and CO2 were elevated, but their effect on the plant is unclear. This study has highlighted that microbial communities in bulk soils are most significantly influenced by crop management practices compared to the climate conditions used in the study. The studied climate conditions had a more limited effect on microbial community diversity in conventionally managed soil samples than in organically managed soils.

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