0
Article ? AI-assigned paper type based on the abstract. Classification may not be perfect — flag errors using the feedback button. Tier 2 ? Original research — experimental, observational, or case-control study. Direct primary evidence. Environmental Sources Sign in to save

Soil metagenomics reveals the effect of nitrogen on soil microbial communities and nitrogen-cycle functional genes in the rhizosphere of Panax ginseng

Frontiers in Plant Science 2024 29 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 55 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Kexin Li, Hongmei Lin, Mei Han, Limin Yang

Summary

Researchers studied how different levels of nitrogen fertilizer affect the soil microbial communities around ginseng roots. They found that moderate nitrogen boosted beneficial microbes and improved ginseng yields, while excessive nitrogen decreased soil pH, reduced microbial diversity, and increased disease-causing organisms. The study highlights the importance of balanced fertilizer use for maintaining healthy soil ecosystems in agricultural settings.

Nitrogen (N) is the primary essential nutrient for ginseng growth, and a reasonable nitrogen application strategy is vital for maintaining the stability of soil microbial functional communities. However, how microbial-mediated functional genes involved in nitrogen cycling in the ginseng rhizosphere respond to nitrogen addition is largely unknown. In this study, metagenomic technology was used to study the effects of different nitrogen additions (N0: 0, N1: 20, N2: 40 N g/m2) on the microbial community and functional nitrogen cycling genes in the rhizosphere soil of ginseng, and soil properties related to the observed changes were evaluated. The results showed that N1 significantly increased the soil nutrient content compared to N0, and the N1 ginseng yield was the highest (29.90% and 38.05% higher than of N0 and N2, respectively). N2 significantly decreased the soil NO3 -N content (17.18 mg/kg lower than N0) and pH. This resulted in a decrease in the diversity of soil microorganisms, a decrease in beneficial bacteria, an increase in the number of pathogenic microorganisms, and an significant increase in the total abundance of denitrification, assimilatory nitrogen reduction, and dissimilatory nitrogen reduction genes, as well as the abundance of nxrA and napA genes (17.70% and 65.25% higher than N0, respectively), which are functional genes involved in nitrification that promote the soil nitrogen cycling process, and reduce the yield of ginseng. The results of the correlation analysis showed that pH was correlated with changes in the soil microbial community, and the contents of soil total nitrogen (TN), ammonium nitrogen (NH4 +-N), and alkaline-hydrolyzed nitrogen (AHN) were the main driving factors affecting the changes in nitrogen cycling functional genes in the rhizosphere soil of ginseng. In summary, nitrogen addition affects ginseng yield through changes in soil chemistry, nitrogen cycling processes, and functional microorganisms.

Sign in to start a discussion.

More Papers Like This

Article Tier 2

Effects of cadmium contamination on bacterial and fungal communities in Panax ginseng-growing soil

Researchers examined how cadmium (a toxic heavy metal) contamination in soil affects the microbial communities around ginseng crops, finding that even low cadmium levels significantly disrupted bacterial diversity more than fungal diversity. Certain bacterial groups that tolerate cadmium became dominant, while beneficial microbes declined — changes that could affect soil health and ginseng safety.

Article Tier 2

The effect of intercropping leguminous green manure on theanine accumulation in the tea plant: A metagenomic analysis

Researchers examined how intercropping tea plants with leguminous green manure affects the accumulation of theanine, a key amino acid in tea. Using soil DNA analysis, they found that the green manure promoted nitrogen-cycling bacteria that enhanced nutrient availability for the tea plants. While the study focuses on agricultural practices, it provides insight into how soil microbial communities respond to different cropping strategies.

Article Tier 2

Metagenomics reveals the response of desert steppe microbial communities and carbon-nitrogen cycling functional genes to nitrogen deposition

Researchers used metagenomics to study how nitrogen deposition affects soil microbial communities and carbon-nitrogen cycling in desert steppe ecosystems. The study provides insights into how anthropogenic nitrogen inputs alter microbial functional gene expression, which can influence broader soil ecosystem processes.

Article Tier 2

Long-Term Compost Amendment Changes Interactions and Specialization in the Soil Bacterial Community, Increasing the Presence of Beneficial N-Cycling Genes in the Soil

Researchers found that long-term compost amendment significantly altered soil bacterial community structure and functional specialization, increasing microbial network complexity and promoting functional guilds associated with organic matter decomposition compared to non-amended soils.

Article Tier 2

Moderate Nitrogen Reduction Increases Nitrogen Use Efficiency and Positively Affects Microbial Communities in Agricultural Soils

A field study found that moderate nitrogen reduction did not significantly reduce crop yield due to increased nitrogen use efficiency driven by higher available phosphorus and potassium, while short-term nitrogen changes had limited effects on soil microbial community structure but increased nitrification-related bacterial functions.

Share this paper