Abstract

Plant production systems that are more sustainable than conventional monoculture croplands are the vision of future agriculture. With numerous environmental benefits, agroforestry is among the most promising alternatives. Although soil fungi are key drivers of plant productivity and ecosystem processes, investigations of these microorganisms in temperate agroforestry systems are scarce, leaving our understanding of agricultural systems under agroforestry practice incomplete. Here, we assessed the composition and diversity of the soil fungal community as well as the frequency (relative abundance) of fungal groups in three paired temperate poplar-based alley cropping (agroforestry) and monoculture cropland systems by amplicon sequencing. Analysis of microbiomes using relative abundances of species or sequence variants obtained from amplicon sequencing ignores microbial population size, which results in several problems. For example, species stimulated by environmental parameters may appear unaffected or suppressed in amplicon counts. Therefore, we determined absolute abundances of selected fungal groups as well as total fungal population size by real-time polymerase chain reaction (PCR). Tree rows strongly affected the community composition and increased the population size and species richness of soil fungi. Furthermore, ectomycorrhiza were strongly promoted by the tree rows. We speculate that mycorrhiza improved the nutrient acquisition in unfertilized tree rows, thereby contributing to the total productivity of the system. Comparison of relative and absolute abundances revealed dramatic discrepancies, highlighting that amplicon sequencing alone cannot adequately assess population size and dynamics. The results of our study highlight the necessity of combining frequency data based on amplicon sequencing with absolute quantification.

Highlights

  • Agroforestry is an alternative agricultural land use that combines crops with trees.Alley cropping is a popular type of agroforestry in which rows of crops are alternated with rows of trees

  • Our results agree with previous findings of greater abundance of soil fungi in tree rows of temperate agroforestry systems compared to crop rows and monoculture cropland systems (Figure S1) [18,20,44]

  • Tree rows in temperate agroforestry cropland systems increased the population size and species richness of soil fungi

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Summary

Introduction

Agroforestry is an alternative agricultural land use that combines crops with trees. Alley cropping is a popular type of agroforestry in which rows of crops are alternated with rows of trees. Modern alley-cropping systems in the temperate zone combine rows of fast-growing trees (e.g., hybrid poplar (Populus spp.)) with rows of arable crops. The spatial proximity of trees and crops triggers diverse above- and belowground interactions between the two habitats, resulting from joint use of resources such as light, water and nutrients as well as from direct biotic interactions such as predation and parasitism [1]. The environmental benefits of temperate agroforestry systems have been extensively reviewed [3,4,5]. Apart from environmental benefits, crop yield depression has consistently been

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