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Microbial Communities Involved in Fe Reduction and Mobility During Soil Organic Matter (SOM) Mineralization in Two Contrasted Paddy Soils
Authors:Affi Jeanne Bongoua-Devisme  Aurélie Cebron  Koffi Emmanuel Kassin  Gballou René Yoro  Christian Mustin  Jacques Berthelin
Institution:1. Laboratory of Microorganism-Mineral-Organic Matter Interactions in Soil (LIMOS), UMR7137, CNRS (National Center of Scientific Research), Science Faculty , Lorraine-University , Vandoeuvre-les-Nancy , France;2. National Center of Agronomic Research (CNRA), Laboratory Soils, Water, and Plant , Gagnoa , Ivory Coast
Abstract:Lowland rice fields of West Africa (Ivory Coast) and South Asia (Thailand) are affected by ferrous toxicity or salinity, respectively, and their soil waters contain large amounts of ferrous iron, depending on reducing irrigation condition and suggesting occurrence of bacterial reducing processes. To determine the involvement, dynamic and activities of bacterial communities in Fe(III) reduction and mobilization during anaerobic degradation and mineralization of soil organic matter (SOM), different experiments and analyses have been performed. Results demonstrated that the utilization of SOM as sole carbon, nutrient and energy sources favored the presence of large bacterial communities: facultative anaerobic and anaerobic bacteria, Fe(III)-reducing bacteria (FeRB) (fermentative and Fe respiring), sulfate reducing bacteria (SRB) which are involved in carbon, nitrogen, iron and sulfur cycling. The larger functional diversity is observed in the Ivory Coast paddy soils containing larger amounts of organic matter and sulfur compounds. These communities contained complementary populations (chemoorganotrophic, chemolitotrophic, aerobic, facultative anaerobic and anaerobic) that can be active at different steps of iron solubilization with simultaneous organic matter mineralization. Our results indicate that the pH controlled by bacterial activity, the nature much more than the content of organic matter, and consequently the structure and activity of bacterial communities influence significantly the availability and dynamic of iron in paddy fields which affect the soil quality.
Keywords:bacterial communities  biodegradation  Fe reduction  Fe(III)-reducing bacteria  lowland  mineralization  paddy fields  soil organic matter
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