Incongruous variation of denitrifying bacterial communities as soil N level rises in Canadian canola fields

Citation

Yang, C., Hamel, C., Gan, Y. (2015). Incongruous variation of denitrifying bacterial communities as soil N level rises in Canadian canola fields, 89 93-101. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.apsoil.2015.01.002

Abstract

Soil N fertilization stimulates the activity of the soil bacterial species specialized in performing the different steps of the denitrification processes. Different responses of these bacterial denitrifiers to soil N management could alter the efficiency of reduction of the greenhouse gas N O into N gas in cultivated fields. We used next generation sequencing to show how raising the soil N fertility of Canadian canola fields differentially modifies the diversity and composition of nitrite reductase (nirK and nirS) and nitrous oxide reductase (nosZ) gene-carrying denitrifying bacterial communities, based on a randomized complete blocks field experiment. Raising soil N levels increased up to 60% the ratio of the nirK to nirS genes, the two nitrite reductase coding genes, in the Brown soil and up to 300% in the Black soil, but this ratio was unaffected in the Dark Brown soil. Raising soil N levels also increased the diversity of the bacteria carrying the nitrite reductase gene nirK (Simpson index, P=0.0417 and Shannon index, 0.0181), and changed the proportions of the six dominant phyla hosting nirK, nirS, and nosZ gene-carrying bacteria. The level of soil copper (Cu) and the abundance of nirK gene, which codes for a Cu-dependent nitrite reductase, were positively related in the Brown (P=0.0060, R =0.48) and Dark Brown (0.0199, R =0.59) soils, but not in the Black soil. The level of total diversity of the denitrifying communities tended to remain constant as N fertilization induced shifts in the composition of these denitrifying communities. Together, our results indicate that higher N fertilizer rate increases the potential risk of nitrous oxide (N O) emission from canola fields by promoting the proliferation of the mostly adaptive N O-producing over the less adaptive N O-reducing bacterial community. 2 2 2 2 2 2 2

Publication date

2015-05-01

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