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The influence of alfalfa-switchgrass intercropping on microbial community structure and function
Authors:Gyuhyon Cha  Kelley A Meinhardt  Luis H Orellana  Janet K Hatt  Manmeet W Pannu  David A Stahl  Konstantinos T Konstantinidis
Institution:1. School of Civil and Environmental Engineering, Georgia Institute of Technology, Atlanta, GA, 30332 USA;2. Civil and Environmental Engineering, University of Washington, Seattle, WA, 98195 USA
Abstract:The use of nitrogen fertilizer on bioenergy crops such as switchgrass results in increased costs, nitrogen leaching and emissions of N2O, a potent greenhouse gas. Intercropping with nitrogen-fixing alfalfa has been proposed as an environmentally sustainable alternative, but the effects of synthetic fertilizer versus intercropping on soil microbial community functionality remain uncharacterized. We analysed 24 metagenomes from the upper soil layer of agricultural fields from Prosser, WA over two growing seasons and representing three agricultural practices: unfertilized switchgrass (control), fertilized switchgrass and switchgrass intercropped with alfalfa. The synthetic fertilization and intercropping did not result in major shifts of microbial community taxonomic and functional composition compared with the control plots, but a few significant changes were noted. Most notably, mycorrhizal fungi, ammonia-oxidizing archaea and bacteria increased in abundance with intercropping and fertilization. However, only betaproteobacterial ammonia-oxidizing bacteria abundance in fertilized plots significantly correlated to N2O emission and companion qPCR data. Collectively, a short period of intercropping elicits minor but significant changes in the soil microbial community toward nitrogen preservation and that intercropping may be a viable alternative to synthetic fertilization.
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