Abstract

Intensive agriculture has major negative impacts on ecosystem diversity and functioning, including that of soils. The associated reduction of soil biodiversity and essential soil functions, such as nutrient cycling, can restrict plant growth and crop yield. By increasing plant diversity in agricultural systems, intercropping could be a promising way to foster soil microbial diversity and functioning. However, plant–microbe interactions and the extent to which they influence crop yield under field conditions are still poorly understood. In this study, we performed an extensive intercropping experiment using eight crop species and 40 different crop mixtures to investigate how crop diversity affects soil microbial diversity and activity, and whether these changes subsequently affect crop yield. Experiments were carried out in mesocosms under natural conditions in Switzerland and in Spain, two countries with drastically different soils and climate, and our crop communities included either one, two or four species. We sampled and sequenced soil microbial DNA to assess soil microbial diversity, and measured soil basal respiration as a proxy for soil activity. Results indicate that in Switzerland, increasing crop diversity led to shifts in soil microbial community composition, and in particular to an increase of several plant-growth promoting microbes, such as members of the bacterial phylum Actinobacteria. These shifts in community composition subsequently led to a 15 and 35% increase in crop yield in 2 and 4-species mixtures, respectively. This suggests that the positive effects of crop diversity on crop productivity can partially be explained by changes in soil microbial composition. However, the effects of crop diversity on soil microbes were relatively small compared to the effects of abiotic factors such as fertilization (three times larger) or soil moisture (three times larger). Furthermore, these processes were context-dependent: in Spain, where resources were limited, soil microbial communities did not respond to crop diversity, and their effect on crop yield was less strong. This research highlights the potential beneficial role of soil microbial communities in intercropping systems, while also reflecting on the relative importance of crop diversity compared to abiotic drivers of microbiomes and emphasizing the context-dependence of crop–microbe relationships.

Highlights

  • The past century has seen the emergence and the development of modern, intensive agriculture that was accompanied by a strong increase in productivity per unit land area (Barrios, 2007)

  • After removing all sequences associated with chloroplasts and mitochondria, we obtained 6,306,145 reads assigned to 43,857 amplicon sequence variants (ASVs)

  • We suggest that this context-dependency of crop diversity effects on soil microbes and ecosystem functioning might be explained by differences in abiotic factors; further research in various environmental conditions is needed to better understand the reasons behind this context-dependency

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Summary

Introduction

The past century has seen the emergence and the development of modern, intensive agriculture that was accompanied by a strong increase in productivity per unit land area (Barrios, 2007). Chemical inputs and the loss of crop diversity associated with intensive agriculture are known to negatively affect soil biodiversity (Cavicchioli et al, 2019), with consequences on soil ecosystem functioning, such as nutrient cycling, carbon storage, soil structure regulation, and pest and disease control (Wall and Bardgett, 2012; Wagg et al, 2014; Fanin et al, 2017). Losses of these essential soil functions can restrict plant growth and subsequently crop yield (Giller, 2001; Bardgett and Van Der Putten, 2014). This increase in soil diversity and functioning could feedback on crop yield through enhanced microbial activity and nutrient mobilization or decreased pathogen accumulation (Zhao et al, 2011; Bender and van der Heijden, 2015; Wang et al, 2017)

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