Bio-fertilizer and rotten straw amendments alter the rhizosphere bacterial community and increase oat productivity in a saline–alkaline environment

Citation

Lu, P., Bainard, L.D., Ma, B., Liu, J. (2020). Bio-fertilizer and rotten straw amendments alter the rhizosphere bacterial community and increase oat productivity in a saline–alkaline environment. Scientific Reports, [online] 10(1), http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41598-020-76978-3

Plain language summary

Saline–alkaline conditions are common in arid and semi-arid regions and can limit the ability to grow productive crops in these soils. Utilizing plant varieties that are tolerant of saline conditions and the application of soil amendments are potential strategies that can be used to successfully grow crops under these challenging conditions. The objective of this study was to determine whether two different organic soil amendments (biofertilizer and rotten straw) could improve the growth and productivity of two oat cultivars with varying saline-alkaline tolerance in a semi-arid region of Northern China. The application of both organic soil amendments together resulted in the highest oat yields and altered the soil properties and microbial diversity. Overall, our study suggested that using tolerant oat cultivars in combination with rotten straw and biofertilizer can be an effective strategy to grow productive crops under saline-alkaline conditions.

Abstract

Saline–alkaline conditions can limit crop productivity and the role of soil microbes in nutrient cycling in arid and semi-arid regions throughout the world. A better understanding of how soil amendments and plant varieties affect rhizosphere microbial communities in saline–alkaline environments is important for the development of sustainable and productive agricultural systems under these challenging conditions. The objective of this study was to determine the effect of organic soil amendments on crop yield, soil physicochemical properties and rhizosphere bacterial communities of two oat cultivars in a saline–alkaline soil. The experiment was conducted in a semi-arid region of Northern China and involved growing two oat cultivars with varying levels of saline–alkaline tolerance under four different amendment treatments: (1) control (no amendments), (2) bio-fertilizer, (3) rotten straw, and (4) combination of bio-fertilizer and rotten straw. The combined bio-fertilizer and rotten straw amendment treatment resulted in the highest oat yields, reduced soil pH, and increased soil salt content for both cultivars. Baiyan2 (tolerant cultivar) had a higher bacterial α-diversity, relative abundance of Proteobacteria and Acidobacteria, and lower relative abundance of Firmicutes compared to Caoyou1 (sensitive cultivar). The rotten straw treatment and combined amendment treatment decreased bacterial α-diversity and the abundance of Proteobacteria, and increased the abundance of Firmicutes, which were positively correlated with soil salt, available nitrogen, phosphorous and potassium for both cultivars. Our study suggested using tolerant oat cultivars with the combined application of rotten straw and bio-fertilizer could be an effective strategy in remediating saline–alkaline soils.

Publication date

2020-12-01

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