Journal article

Protist communities are more sensitive to nitrogen fertilization than other microorganisms in diverse agricultural soils

ZB Zhao, JZ He, S Geisen, LL Han, JT Wang, JP Shen, WX Wei, YT Fang, PP Li, LM Zhang

Microbiome | BMC | Published : 2019

Abstract

Background: Agricultural food production is at the base of food and fodder, with fertilization having fundamentally and continuously increased crop yield over the last decades. The performance of crops is intimately tied to their microbiome as they together form holobionts. The importance of the microbiome for plant performance is, however, notoriously ignored in agricultural systems as fertilization disconnects the dependency of plants for often plant-beneficial microbial processes. Moreover, we lack a holistic understanding of how fertilization regimes affect the soil microbiome. Here, we examined the effect of a 2-year fertilization regime (no nitrogen fertilization control, nitrogen fert..

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University of Melbourne Researchers

Grants

Awarded by Chinese Academy of Sciences


Funding Acknowledgements

This work was financially supported by the Strategic Priority Research Program of the Chinese Academy of Sciences (XDB15020200) and the National Key R&D Program (2017YFD0200600). Stefan Geisen was supported by a NWO-VENI grant from the Netherlands Organisation for Scientific Research (016.Veni.181.078), and Li-Mei Zhang by the Youth Innovation Promotion Association, Chinese Academy of Sciences.