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Characteristics of Rhizosphere Microbiome, Soil Chemical Properties, and Plant Biomass and Nutrients in Citrus reticulata cv. Shatangju Exposed to Increasing Soil Cu Levels

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Hao Xia, Xiaorong Mo, Muhammad Riaz, Qichun Huang, Qichun Huang, Muhammad Riaz, Muhammad Riaz, Chuanwu Chen, Hao Xia, Muhammad Riaz, Muhammad Riaz, Xiaomin Liang, Muhammad Riaz, Jinye Li, Yilin Chen, Qiling Tan, Songwei Wu, Chengxiao Hu, Chengxiao Hu

Summary

This study characterized rhizosphere microbiome composition, soil chemical properties, and plant biochemistry in relation to soil management practices, finding that treatment type drives distinct rhizosphere microbial communities with functional consequences for plant health.

The prolonged utilization of copper (Cu)-containing fungicides results in Cu accumulation and affects soil ecological health. Thus, a pot experiment was conducted using <i>Citrus reticulata</i> cv. Shatangju with five Cu levels (38, 108, 178, 318, and 388 mg kg<sup>-1</sup>) to evaluate the impacts of the soil microbial processes, chemistry properties, and citrus growth. These results revealed that, with the soil Cu levels increased, the soil total Cu (TCu), available Cu (ACu), organic matter (SOM), available potassium (AK), and pH increased while the soil available phosphorus (AP) and alkali-hydrolyzable nitrogen (AN) decreased. Moreover, the soil extracellular enzyme activities related to C and P metabolism decreased while the enzymes related to N metabolism increased, and the expression of soil genes involved in C, N, and P cycling was regulated. Moreover, it was observed that tolerant microorganisms (e.g., <i>p_Proteobacteria</i>, <i>p_Actinobacteria</i>, <i>g_Lysobacter</i>, <i>g_Sphingobium</i>, <i>f_Aspergillaceae</i>, and <i>g_Penicillium</i>) were enriched but sensitive taxa (<i>p_Myxococcota</i>) were suppressed in the citrus rhizosphere. The citrus biomass was mainly positively correlated with soil AN and AP; plant N and P were mainly positively correlated with soil AP, AN, and acid phosphatase (ACP); and plant K was mainly negatively related with soil β-glucosidase (βG) and positively related with the soil fungal Shannon index. The dominant bacterial taxa <i>p_Actinobacteriota</i> presented positively correlated with the plant biomass and plant N, P, and K and was negatively correlated with plant Cu. The dominant fungal taxa <i>p_Ascomycota</i> was positively related to plant Cu but negatively with the plant biomass and plant N, P, and K. Notably, arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi (<i>p_Glomeromycota</i>) were positively related with plant P below soil Cu 108 mg kg<sup>-1</sup>, and pathogenic fungi (<i>p_Mortierellomycota</i>) was negatively correlated with plant K above soil Cu 178 mg kg<sup>-1</sup>. These findings provided a new perspective on soil microbes and chemistry properties and the healthy development of the citrus industry at increasing soil Cu levels.

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