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Joint effect of black carbon deriving from wheat straw burning and plastic mulch film debris on the soil biochemical properties, bacterial and fungal communities

The Science of The Total Environment 2024 4 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count.
Xiaoyan Yuan, Shuai Ma, Shuai Ma, Huanhuan Geng, Manman Cao, Manman Cao, Huilun Chen, Beihai Zhou, Beihai Zhou, Rongfang Yuan, Shuai Luo, Shuai Luo, Ke Sun, Ke Sun, Fei Wang, Fei Wang

Summary

Researchers examined the joint effects of black carbon from wheat straw burning and plastic mulch film debris on soil biochemical properties and microbial communities over 100 days, finding that the combination altered bacterial and fungal community composition. Biodegradable mulch films showed different effects than conventional polyethylene films.

Polymers

Black carbon (BC) formed after straw burning remains in farmland soil and coexists with plastic mulch film (PMF) debris. It is unclear how BC influences soil multifunctionality in the presence of PMF debris. In this study, we determined the joint effects of BC and PMF debris on soil biochemical properties and microbial communities. We conducted a soil microcosm experiment by adding BC formed by direct burning of wheat straw and PMF debris (polyethylene (PE) and biodegradable PMF (BP)) into soil at the dosages of 1 %, and soils were sampled on the 15th, 30th, and 100th day of soil incubation for high-throughput sequencing. The results showed that the degradation of PMF debris was accompanied by the release of microplastics (MPs). BC decreased NH-N (PE: 68.63 %; BP: 58.97 %) and NO-N (PE: 12.83 %; BP: 51.37 %) and increased available phosphorus (AP) (PE: 79.12 %; BP: 26.09 %) in soil containing PMF debris. There were significant differences in enzyme activity among all the treatments. High-throughput sequencing indicated that BC reduced bacterial and fungal richness and fungal diversity in PMF debris-exposed soil, whereas PMF debris and BC resulted in significant changes in the proportion of dominant phyla and genera of bacteria and fungi, which were affected by incubation time. Furthermore, BC affected microorganisms by influencing soil properties, and pH and N content were the main influencing factors. In addition, FAPRPTAX analysis indicated that BC and PMF debris affected soil C and N cycling. These findings provide new insights into the response of soil multifunctionality to BC and PMF debris.

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