Abstract

Tremendous amounts of nitrogen (N) fertilizer have been added to arable lands, often resulting in substantial effects on terrestrial ecosystems, including soil acidification, altered enzyme activities and changes in microbial community composition. Soil microbes are the major drivers of soil carbon (C) and N cycling; therefore, understanding the response of microbial communities to elevated N inputs is of significant importance. This study was carried out to investigate the influences of different N fertilization rates (0, 182, and 225 kg ha-1 representing control, low, and high N supply for each crop season for summer maize and winter wheat) on soil biochemical attributes, extracellular enzyme activities, and the microbial community composition in a winter wheat-summer maize rotation cropping system in north-central China. The results showed that N addition significantly decreased the soil pH in both the wheat and maize seasons. Microbial biomass N (MBN) decreased following N fertilization in the wheat season, while the opposite trend in MBN was observed in the maize season. Response ratio analysis showed that the activities of enzymes involved in C, N, and phosphorus cycling were significantly enhanced under N enrichment in both the wheat and maize seasons, and higher enzyme activities were noted in the high N addition treatment than in the low N addition treatment. A linear increase in fungal abundance with the N addition gradient was observed in the wheat season, whereas the fungal abundance increased and then decreased in the maize season. The bacterial abundance showed an increased and then decreased trend in response to the N addition gradient in both the wheat and maize crop seasons. Moreover, the partial least squares path model (PLS-PM) analysis showed that soil pH and soil organic carbon (SOC) were the most important soil variables, causing shifts in the soil bacteria. Furthermore, compared with the N-cycling enzymes, the C-cycling enzymes were significantly affected by the soil pH and SOC. Taken together, these results suggest that the effect of N addition on enzyme activities was consistent in both crop seasons, while the effects on MBN and microbial community composition to N addition were highly variable in the two crop seasons. Moreover, N fertilization-induced changes in the soil chemical properties such as soil acidity and SOC played a substantial role in shaping the microbial community.

Highlights

  • The global demand for nitrogen (N) fertilizer for crop production is increasing daily, and as a result, the global N fertilizer demand is expected to increase from 86 Tg (860,0000 metric tons) of N in 1995 to 135 Tg of N in 2050 [1,2]

  • Some researchers demonstrated that N enrichment increased microbial abundance, decreased diversity, and altered the microbial community structure [6, 10], and N input has been identified as a key factor impacting microbial community composition in terrestrial ecosystems

  • We explored the relationships among soil chemical properties, bacterial and fungal Phospholipid fatty acid (PLFA) and soil enzymes (C-cycling enzymes and N-cycling enzymes) under N fertilization by using partial least squares path modeling (PLS-PM), an important statistical tool that can demonstrate cause and effect relationships among observed and latent variables [38]

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Summary

Introduction

The global demand for nitrogen (N) fertilizer for crop production is increasing daily, and as a result, the global N fertilizer demand is expected to increase from 86 Tg (860,0000 metric tons) of N in 1995 to 135 Tg of N in 2050 [1,2]. Zhao et al (2014) demonstrated that N addition did not increase microbial biomass; N fertilization did increase the abundances of bacterial [11] and fungal communities [12]. It remains unclear how N addition governs microbial biomass C and N (MBC and MBN) dynamics. Wang et al (2018a) found that MBN decreased as a result of N fertilization These divergent results demonstrate that how N enrichment governs the microbial C and N pools and community structure in terrestrial ecosystems remains unclear

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