Soil Nitrogen Treatment Alters Microbiome Networks Across Farm Niches

Agriculture is fundamental for food production, and microbiomes support agriculture through multiple essential ecosystem services. Despite the importance of individual (i.e., niche specific) agricultural microbiomes, microbiome interactions across niches are not well-understood. To observe the linka...

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Published inFrontiers in microbiology Vol. 12; p. 786156
Main Authors Wang, XinYue, Reilly, Kerri, Heathcott, Rosemary, Biswas, Ambarish, Johnson, Linda J, Teasdale, Suliana, Grelet, Gwen-Aëlle, Podolyan, Anastasija, Gregorini, Pablo, Attwood, Graeme T, Palevich, Nikola, Morales, Sergio E
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Switzerland Frontiers Media S.A 14.02.2022
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Summary:Agriculture is fundamental for food production, and microbiomes support agriculture through multiple essential ecosystem services. Despite the importance of individual (i.e., niche specific) agricultural microbiomes, microbiome interactions across niches are not well-understood. To observe the linkages between nearby agricultural microbiomes, multiple approaches (16S, 18S, and ITS) were used to inspect a broad coverage of niche microbiomes. Here we examined agricultural microbiome responses to 3 different nitrogen treatments (0, 150, and 300 kg/ha/yr) in soil and tracked linked responses in other neighbouring farm niches (rumen, faecal, white clover leaf, white clover root, rye grass leaf, and rye grass root). Nitrogen treatment had little impact on microbiome structure or composition across niches, but drastically reduced the microbiome network connectivity in soil. Networks of 16S microbiomes were the most sensitive to nitrogen treatment across amplicons, where ITS microbiome networks were the least responsive. Nitrogen enrichment in soil altered soil and the neighbouring microbiome networks, supporting our hypotheses that nitrogen treatment in soil altered microbiomes in soil and in nearby niches. This suggested that agricultural microbiomes across farm niches are ecologically interactive. Therefore, knock-on effects on neighbouring niches should be considered when management is applied to a single agricultural niche.
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This article was submitted to Microbial Symbioses, a section of the journal Frontiers in Microbiology
Edited by: Stephan Schmitz-Esser, Iowa State University, United States
Reviewed by: Jun Zhang, Northwest A&F University, China; Haitao Wang, Center for Cancer Research, National Cancer Institute, United States
ISSN:1664-302X
1664-302X
DOI:10.3389/fmicb.2021.786156