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1.

Purpose  

Spartina alterniflora widely invades coastal wetland in China and might change nitrification in sediment. Both ammonia-oxidizing archaea (AOA) and ammonia-oxidizing bacteria (AOB) are involved in nitrification in this environment. The objective of this study was to examine the effect of S. alterniflora invasion on abundance and composition of AOA and AOB.  相似文献   

2.
Wang  Mengzi  Wang  Shanyun  Long  Xien  Zhuang  Linjie  Zhao  Xue  Jia  Zhongjun  Zhu  Guibing 《Journal of Soils and Sediments》2019,19(3):1077-1087
Purpose

Ammonia oxidation is the limiting step in soil nitrification and critical in the global nitrogen cycle. The discovery of ammonia-oxidizing archaea (AOA) has improved our knowledge of microbial mechanisms for ammonia oxidation in complex soil environments. However, the relative contributions of AOA and ammonia-oxidizing bacteria (AOB) to ammonia oxidation remain unclear.

Materials and methods

In this study, through large geographical scale sampling in China, totally nine samples representing various types of arable land soils were selected for analyzing the ammonia oxidation activity. The AOA and AOB activities were separately determined by using the dicyandiamide and 1-octyne inhibition method. High-throughput pyrosequencing and DNA stable-isotope probing (DNA-SIP) analysis were applied to investigate the distribution and activity of Candidatus Nitrosocosmicus franklandus in the arable land soils.

Results and discussion

In this study, AOA abundance (3.2?×?107–3.4?×?109 copies g?1) and activity (0.01–1.33 mg N kg?1 dry soil day?1) were evaluated for nine selected arable land soils and accounted for 4–100% of ammonia oxidation. By separately determining AOA and AOB rates, we observed that archaeal ammonia oxidation dominated the ammonia oxidation process in six soils, revealing a considerable contribution of AOA in ammonia oxidation in arable land soils. Based on high-throughput pyrosequencing analysis, the AOA species Ca. N. franklandus with relatively low abundance (0.6–13.5% in AOA) was ubiquitously distributed in all the tested samples. Moreover, according to the DNA-SIP analysis for Urumqi sample, the high activity and efficiency of Ca. N. franklandus in using CO2 suggests that this species plays an important role in archaeal ammonia oxidation in arable land soils.

Conclusions

Through determining the AOA activity and analyzing the potential predominant functional AOA species, this study greatly improves our understanding of ammonia oxidation in arable land soils.

  相似文献   

3.
Increasing lines of evidence have suggested the functional importance of ammonia-oxidizing archaea (AOA) rather than bacteria (AOB) for nitrification in upland soils with low pH. However, it remains unclear whether niche specialization of AOA and AOB occurs in rice paddy wetlands constrained by oxygen availability. Using DNA-based stable isotope probing, we conclude that AOA dominated nitrification activity in acidic paddy soils (pH 5.6) while AOB dominated in alkaline soils (pH 8.2). Nitrification activity was stimulated by urea fertilization and accompanied by a significant increase of AOA in acid soils and AOB in alkaline soils. DNA-based stable isotope probing indicated significant assimilation of 13CO2 for AOA only in acidic paddy soil, while AOB was the solely responsible for ammonia oxidation in the alkaline paddy soil. Phylogenetic analysis further indicated that AOA members within the soil group 1.1b lineage dominated nitrification in acid soils. Ammonia oxidation in the alkaline soil was catalyzed by Nitrosospira cluster 3-like AOB, suggesting that the physiological diversity of AOA is more complicated than previously thought, and soil pH plays important roles in shaping the community structures of ammonia oxidizers in paddy field.  相似文献   

4.

Purpose

Ammonia oxidation—as the rate-limiting step of nitrification—has been found to be performed by both ammonia-oxidizing archaea (AOA) and bacteria (AOB). However, how ammonium content and oxidation–reduction status regulate the distribution of ammonia oxidizers in constructed wetlands and their contribution to potential ammonia oxidation rate are still in dispute. This study aimed to explore the effects of ammonium content and oxidation–reduction status on the abundances of AOA/AOB and examine the contributions of AOA and AOB populations to ammonia oxidation rates in the plant-bed/ditch system of a constructed wetland.

Materials and methods

Sampling was carried out in the plant-bed/ditch system of the Shijiuyang Constructed Wetland, China. Three plant-bed soil cores were collected using a soil auger and sampled at depths of 0, 20, and 50 cm in 5-cm increments. Five ditch surface sediments (0–5 cm) were collected along the water flow direction. The abundances of AOA and AOB were investigated by quantitative polymerase chain reaction based on amoA genes. The potential ammonia oxidation rate was determined using the chlorate inhibition method.

Results and discussion

The results showed that AOA outnumbered AOB in the plant-bed surface soil which had lower ammonium content (4.67–7.63 mg kg?1), but that AOB outnumbered AOA in the ditch surface sediment which had higher ammonium content (14.0–22.9 mg kg?1). Ammonium content was found to be the crucial factor influencing the relative abundances of AOA and AOB in the surface samples of the plant-bed/ditch system. In the deep layers of the plant bed, AOA abundance outnumbered AOB, though much lower oxidation–reduction potential occurred along the water flow direction. Thus, the oxidation–reduction potential may be another factor influencing the distributions of AOA and AOB in the deep layers of the plant bed without significant difference in ammonium content (p?<?0.05). Moreover, the potential ammonia oxidation rate was significantly dominated by AOB rather than AOA in the plant-bed/ditch system.

Conclusions

The high ammonium content in the ditch sediment likely favored AOB. AOA seemed to persist more readily even under low oxidation–reduction potential in the deep layers of the plant bed. Ammonium content and the oxidation–reduction potential were important parameters influencing the distribution of AOA and AOB in the plant-bed/ditch system of Shijiuyang Constructed Wetland. AOB contributed more to ammonia oxidation than AOA, both in the plant-bed soils (r?=?0.592, p?=?0.0096) and in the ditch sediments (r?=?0.873, p?=?0.0002).  相似文献   

5.
Recent studies of ammonia-oxidizing archaea (AOA) suggested their significant contributions to global nitrogen cycling, and phylogenetic analysis categorized AOA into a novel archaeal phylum, the Thaumarchaeota. AOA are ubiquitous in terrestrial ecosystems, have unique mechanisms for nitrification, better adaptation to low-pH pressures, and strikingly lower ammonia requirements compared with ammonia-oxidizing bacteria (AOB). Previous perceptions that microbial ammonia oxidation in acidic soils was minimal, and entirely meditated by autotrophic bacteria and occasionally by heterotrophic nitrifiers have been dramatically challenged, and the dominant nitrifying groups urgently called for re-assessment. Controversially, the relative contributions of AOA and AOB to autotrophic ammonia oxidation have been reported to vary in different soils, but ammonia substrate availability, which was largely restricted under acidic conditions, seemed to be the key driver. Theoretically predicted ammonia concentrations in acidic soils below the substrate threshold of AOB and remarkably high ammonia affinity of AOA raised the supposition that thaumarchaea could represent the dominant ammonia-oxidizing group in ammonia-limited acidic environments. Recently, the functional dominance of thaumarchaea over its bacterial counterpart and autotrophic thaumarchaeal ammonia oxidation in acidic soils has been compellingly confirmed by DNA-stable isotope probing (SIP) experiments and the cultivation of an obligate acidophilic thaumarchaeon, Nitrosotalea devanaterra. Here, we review the currently available knowledge concerning the history and progress in our understanding of the ammonia-oxidizing microorganisms (AOB and AOA) and the mechanisms of nitrification in nutrient-depleted acidic soils, present the possible mechanisms shaping the distinct niches of AOA and AOB, and thus strengthen the assumption that AOA dominate over AOB in ammonia oxidation of acidic soils.  相似文献   

6.
Li  Yaying  Xi  Ruijiao  Wang  Weijin  Yao  Huaiying 《Journal of Soils and Sediments》2019,19(3):1416-1426
Purpose

Microbial nitrification plays an important role in nitrogen cycling in ecosystems. Nitrification is performed by ammonia-oxidizing archaea (AOA), ammonia-oxidizing bacteria (AOB), and nitrite-oxidizing bacteria (NOB) including complete ammonia oxidizers. However, the relative importance of nitrifiers in autotrophic nitrification in relation to soil pH is still unclear.

Materials and methods

Combining DNA-based stable isotope probing (SIP) and molecular biological techniques, we investigated the abundance, structure, and activity of AOA, AOB, and NOB along a pH-gradient (3.97–7.04) in a vegetable cropped soil.

Results and discussion

We found that AOA abundance outnumbered AOB abundance and had a significantly negative relationship with soil pH. The abundances of NOB Nitrospira 16S rRNA, nxrB gene, and Nitrobacter nxrA gene were affected by soil pH. Incubation of soil with 13CO2 and DNA-SIP analysis demonstrated that significant 13CO2 assimilation by AOA rather than by AOB occurred in the acidic soils, whereas the labeled 13C level of AOA was much less in the neutral soil than in the acidic soils. There was no evidence of 13CO2 assimilation by NOB except for Nitrobacter with NxrB gene at pH 3.97. Phylogenetic analysis of AOA amoA gene in the 13C- and 12C-labeled treatments showed that the active AOA mainly belonged to Nitrososphaera in the acidic soils.

Conclusions

These results suggested that the main performer of nitrification was AOA in the acidic soils, but both AOA and AOB participated in nitrification in the neutral soil with low nitrification activity. NOB Nitrospira and Nitrobacter did not grow in the soils with pH 4.82–7.04 and other populations of NOB were probably involved in nitrite oxidation in the vegetable cropped soil.

  相似文献   

7.
Ammonia oxidation, the first step of nitrification, is mediated by both ammonia-oxidizing archaea (AOA) and bacteria (AOB); however, the relative contributions of AOA and AOB to soil nitrification are not well understood. In this study we used 1-octyne to discriminate between AOA- and AOB-supported nitrification determined both in soil-water slurries and in unsaturated whole soil at field moisture. Soils were collected from stands of red alder (Alnus rubra Bong.) and Douglas-fir (Pseudotsuga menziesii Mirb. Franco) at three sites (Cascade Head, the H.J. Andrews, and McDonald Forest) on acidic soils (pH 3.9–5.7) in Oregon, USA. The abundances of AOA and AOB were measured using quantitative PCR by targeting the amoA gene, which encodes subunit A of ammonia monooxygenase. Total and AOA-specific (octyne-resistant) nitrification activities in soil slurries were significantly higher at Cascade Head (the most acidic soils, pH < 5) than at either the H.J. Andrews or McDonald Forest, and greater in red alder compared with Douglas-fir soils. The fraction of octyne-resistant nitrification varied among sites (21–74%) and was highest at Cascade Head than at the other two locations. Net nitrification rates of whole soil without NH4+ amendment ranged from 0.4 to 3.3 mg N kg−1 soil d−1. Overall, net nitrification rates of whole soil were stimulated 2- to 8-fold by addition of 140 mg NH4+-N kg−1 soil; this was significant for red alder at Cascade Head and the H.J. Andrews. Red alder at Cascade Head was unique in that the majority of NH4+-stimulated nitrifying activity was octyne-resistant (73%). At all other sites, NH4+-stimulated nitrification was octyne-sensitive (68–90%). The octyne-sensitive activity—presumably AOB—was affected more by soil pH whereas the octyne-resistant (AOA) activity was more strongly related to N availability.  相似文献   

8.

Purpose  

Nitrous oxide (N2O) is a potent greenhouse gas and, in grazed grassland systems where animals graze outdoor pastures, most of the N2O is emitted from animal urine nitrogen (N) deposited during grazing. Recently, ammonia-oxidizing archaea (AOA) were found to be present in large numbers in soils as well in the ocean, suggesting a potentially important role for AOA, in addition to ammonia-oxidizing bacteria (AOB), in the nitrogen cycle. The relationship between N2O emissions and AOB and AOA populations is unknown. The objective of this study was to determine the quantitative relationship between N2O emissions and AOB and AOA populations in nitrogen-rich grassland soils.  相似文献   

9.
Li  Jie  Shi  Yuanliang  Luo  Jiafa  Li  Yan  Wang  Lingli  Lindsey  Stuart 《Journal of Soils and Sediments》2019,19(3):1250-1259
Purpose

Nitrification and denitrification in the N cycle are affected by various ammonia oxidizers and denitrifying microbes in intensive vegetable cultivation soils, but our current understanding of the effect these microbes have on N2O emissions is limited. The nitrification inhibitor, 3,4-dimethylpyrazole phosphate (DMPP), acts by slowing nitrification and is used to improve fertilizer use efficiency and reduce N losses from agricultural systems; however, its effects on nitrifier and denitrifier activities in intensive vegetable cultivation soils are unknown.

Materials and methods

In this study, we measured the impacts of DMPP on N2O emissions, ammonia oxidizers, and denitrifying microbes in two intensive vegetable cultivation soils: one that had been cultivated for a short term (1 year) and one that had been cultivated over a longer term (29 years). The quantitative PCR technique was used in this study. Three treatments, including control (no fertilizer), urea alone, and urea with DMPP, were included for each soil. The application rates of urea and DMPP were 1800 kg ha?1 and 0.5% of the urea-N application rate.

Results and discussion

The application of N significantly increased N2O emissions in both soils. The abundance of ammonia-oxidizing bacteria (AOB) increased significantly with high rate of N fertilizer application in both soils. Conversely, there was no change in the growth rate of ammonia-oxidizing archaea (AOA) in response to the applied urea despite the presence of larger numbers of AOA in these soils. This suggests AOB may play a greater role than AOA in the nitrification process, and N2O emission in intensive vegetable cultivation soils. The application of DMPP significantly reduced soil NO3?-N content and N2O emission, and delayed ammonia oxidation. It greatly reduced AOB abundance, but not AOA abundance. Moreover, the presence of DMPP was correlated with a significant decrease in the abundance of nitrite reductase (nirS and nirK) genes.

Conclusions

Long-term intensive vegetable cultivation with heavy N fertilization altered AOB and nirS abundance. In vegetable cultivation soils with high N levels, DMPP can be effective in mitigating N2O emissions by directly inhibiting both ammonia oxidizing and denitrifying microbes.

  相似文献   

10.
Taking two important agricultural soils with different pH, brown soil (Hap-Udic Luvisol) and cinnamon soil (Hap-Ustic Luvisol), from Northeast China, a pot culture experiment with spring maize (Zea mays L.) was conducted to study the dynamic changes in the abundance and diversity of soil ammonia-oxidizing bacteria (AOB) and ammonia-oxidizing archaea (AOA) populations during maize growth period in response to the additions of nitrification inhibitors dicyandiamide (DCD) and 3,4-dimethylpyrazole phosphate (DMPP) by the methods of real-time polymerase chain reaction (PCR) assay, PCR-denaturing gradient gel electrophoresis (DGGE), and construction of clone library targeting the amoA gene. Four treatments were established, i.e., no urea (control), urea, urea plus DCD, and urea plus DMPP. Both DCD and DMPP inhibited growth of AOB significantly, compared to applying urea alone. Soil bacterial amoA gene copies had a significant positive linear correlation with soil nitrate content, but soil archaeal amoA gene copies did not. In both soils, all AOB sequences fell within Nitrosospira or Nitrosospira-like groups, and all AOA sequences belonged to group 1.1b crenaxchaea. With the application of DCD or DMPP, community composition of AOB and AOA in the two soils had less change except that the AOB community composition in Hap-Udic Luvisol changed at the last two growth stages of maize under the application of DCD. AOB rather than AOA likely dominated soil ammonia oxidation in these two agricultural soils.  相似文献   

11.
It is still not clear which group of ammonia-oxidizing microorganisms plays the most important roles in nitrification in soils. Change in abundances and community compositions of ammonia-oxidizing bacteria (AOB) and ammonia-oxidizing archaea (AOA) under long-term different nitrogen (N) fertilization rates were investigated in an acidic luvisols soil using real-time polymerase chain reaction and denaturing gradient gel electrophoresis, respectively, based on the ammonia monooxygenase a-subunit gene. The experimental plan included the following treatments: control without N fertilization (NCK), low N fertilization rate, middle N fertilization rate, and high N fertilization rate as 0, 100, 150, and 250?kg urea-N?ha?1, respectively. Long-term different N fertilization rates did not significantly alter the total C and N contents of soil while it significantly decreased soil pH, which ranged from 5.60 to 5.20. The AOB abundance was more abundant in the N fertilization treatments than the NCK treatment; the AOA abundance decreased by the increasing N fertilization rates, as did the ratios of AOA/AOB. The large differences in the potential nitrification rates among four treatments depended on the changes in AOA abundance but not to changes in AOB abundance. Phylogenetic analysis showed that the AOB communities were dominated by Nitrosospira clusters 1, 3, and 9 while all AOA sequences were grouped into soil/sediment cluster except for one sequence. Taken together, these results indicated that AOB and AOA preferred different soil N conditions and AOA were functionally more important in the nitrification than AOB in the acidic luvisols soil.  相似文献   

12.
Gu  Yan  Mi  Wenhai  Xie  Yinan  Ma  Qingxu  Wu  Lianghuan  Hu  Zhaoping  Dai  Feng 《Journal of Soils and Sediments》2019,19(2):872-882
Purpose

Yellow clay paddy soil (Oxisols) is a low-yield soil with low nitrogen use efficiency (NUE) in southern China. The nitrification inhibitor nitrapyrin (2-chloro-6- (tricholoromethyl)-pyridine, CP) has been applied to improve NUE and reduce environmental pollution in paddy soil. However, the effects of nitrapyrin combined with nitrogen fertilizers on ammonia oxidizers in yellow clay paddy soil have not been examined.

Materials and methods

A randomized complete block design was set with three treatments: (1) without nitrogen fertilizer (CK), (2) common prilled urea (PU), and (3) prilled urea with nitrapyrin (NPU). Soil samples were collected from three treatments where CK, PU, and NPU had been repeatedly applied over 5 years. Soil samples were analyzed by quantitative PCR and 454 high-throughput pyrosequencing of the amoA gene to investigate the influence of nitrapyrin combined with nitrogen on the abundance and community structure of ammonia oxidizers in yellow clay paddy soil.

Results and discussion

The potential nitrification rate (PNR) of the soil was significantly correlated with the abundances of both ammonia-oxidizing archaea (AOA) and ammonia-oxidizing bacteria (AOB). Application of urea significantly stimulated AOA and AOB growth, whereas nitrapyrin exhibited inhibitory effects on AOA. Phylogenetic analysis showed that the most dominant operational taxonomic units (OTUs) of AOA and AOB were affiliated with the Nitrosotalea cluster and Nitrosospira cluster 12, respectively. AOA and AOB community structures were not altered by urea and nitrapyrin application.

Conclusions

Nitrogen fertilization stimulated nitrification and increased the population sizes of AOA and AOB. Nitrapyrin affected the abundance, but not community structure of ammonia oxidizers in yellow clay soil. Our results suggested that nitrapyrin improving NUE and inhibiting PNR was attributable to the inhibition of AOA growth.

  相似文献   

13.
Nitrification is essential to the nitrogen cycle in paddy soils. However, it is still not clear which group of ammonia-oxidizing microorganisms plays more important roles in nitrification in the paddy soils. The changes in the abundance and composition of ammonia-oxidizing archaea (AOA) and ammonia-oxidizing bacteria (AOB) were investigated by real-time PCR, terminal restriction fragment length polymorphism, and clone library approaches in an acid red paddy soil subjected to long-term fertilization treatments, including treatment without fertilizers (CT); chemical fertilizer nitrogen (N); N and potassium (NK); N and phosphorus (NP); N, P, and K (NPK); and NPK plus recycled crop residues (NPK+C). The AOA population size in NPK+C was higher than those in CT, while minor changes in AOB population sizes were detected among the treatments. There were also some changes in AOA community composition responding to different fertilization treatments. Still few differences were detected in AOB community composition among the treatments. Phylogenetic analysis showed that the AOA sequences fell into two main clusters: cluster A and cluster soil/sediment. The AOB composition in this paddy soil was dominated by Nitrosospira cluster 12. These results suggested that the AOA were more sensitive than AOB to different fertilization treatments in the acid red paddy soil.  相似文献   

14.

Purpose  

Boreal peat soils comprise about 3% of the terrestrial environments, and when drained, they become sources of the greenhouse gas nitrous oxide (N2O). Ammonia oxidation can result in N2O emissions, either directly or by fuelling denitrification, but we know little about the ecology of ammonia-oxidizing bacteria (AOB) and archaea (AOA) in peat soils. Our aim was to determine temporal alterations in abundance and composition of these communities in a drained and forested peat soil in relation to N2O emissions and ammonia oxidation activity.  相似文献   

15.
石灰和双氰胺对红壤酸化和硝化作用的影响及其机制   总被引:4,自引:1,他引:3  
施用石灰是改良酸性土壤的重要措施,但其对土壤硝化作用的增强不仅加速土壤酸化,也增加硝态氮流失风险。传统的硝化抑制剂双氰胺(Dicyandiamide,DCD)能否在石灰改变pH的条件下始终有效抑制硝化是当前红壤区生产中亟需解决的问题。采用短期土壤培养试验,探讨了不同用量石灰与DCD配合施用对土壤酸化和硝化作用的影响及其机制。结果表明:施用一定量的石灰(≤4 g·kg–1)显著提高土壤pH,通过促进氨氧化细菌的生长以促进硝化作用。在不同pH条件下,DCD对红壤硝化过程均有显著抑制效果。在较高pH(pH 7.0~7.8)条件下,DCD主要通过降低氨氧化细菌的丰度以抑制硝化,而在低pH(pH<6.0)条件下,DCD对氨氧化古菌和氨氧化细菌的丰度均有抑制作用。此外,DCD通过抑制土壤硝化,显著提高了土壤pH。上述结果表明,适宜量(2~4 g·kg–1)的石灰和DCD结合施用不仅能够减缓红壤酸化,而且能够抑制硝化作用,降低硝态氮的潜在环境风险。  相似文献   

16.
As the first and rate-limiting step of nitrification, ammonia oxidation can be realized either by ammonia-oxidizing bacteria (AOB) or archaea (AOA). However, the key factors driving the abundance, community structure and activity of ammonia oxidizers are still unclear, and the relative importance of AOA and AOB in ammonia oxidation is unresolved. In the present study, we examined the effects of long-term (6 years) nitrogen (N) addition and simulated precipitation increment on the abundance and community composition of AOA and AOB based on a field trial in a typical temperate steppe of northern China. We used combined approaches of quantitative PCR, terminal-restriction fragment length polymorphism (T-RFLP) and clone library analyses of amoA genes. The study objective was to determine (1) AOA and AOB diversity and activity in response to N addition and increased precipitation and (2) the relative contributions of AOA and AOB to soil ammonia oxidation in the typical temperate steppe. The results showed that the potential nitrification rate (PNR) increased with N addition, but decreased with increased precipitation. Both N addition and increased precipitation significantly increased AOB but not AOA abundance, and a significant correlation was only observed between PNR and AOB amoA gene copies. The T-RFLP analysis showed that both N and precipitation were key factors in shaping the composition of AOB, while AOA were only marginally influenced. Phylogenetic analysis indicated that all AOA clones fell within the soil and sediment lineage while all AOB clones fell within the Nitrosospira. The study suggested that AOA and AOB had distinct physiological characteristics and ecological niches. AOB were shown to be more sensitive to N and precipitation than AOA, and the ammonia oxidation process was therefore supposed to be mainly driven by AOB in this temperate steppe.  相似文献   

17.

Purpose

Human disturbance is a major culprit driving imbalances in the biological transformation of nitrogen from the nonreactive to the reactive pool and is therefore one of the greatest concerns for nitrogen (N) cycling. The objective of this study was to compare potential nitrification rates and the abundance of ammonia oxidizers responsible for nitrification, with the amendment of external N in different agricultural soils.

Materials and methods

Three typical Chinese agricultural soils, QiYang (QY) acid soil, ShenYang (SY) neutral soil, and FengQiu (FQ) alkaline soil, were amended with 0, 20, 150, and 300 μg NH4 +-N g?1 soil and incubated for 40 days. The abundance of ammonia oxidizing bacteria (AOB) and archaea (AOA) at the end of incubation in the soil microcosms was determined using the real-time PCR.

Results and discussion

There was a significant decrease in ammonium concentration in the QY soil from the highest to the lowest N-loading treatments, while no significant difference in ammonium concentrations was detected among the different N-loading treatments for the SY and FQ soils. A significantly higher potential nitrification rate (PNR) was observed in the FQ soil while lowest PNR was found in the QY soil. Quantitative PCR analysis of AOB amoA genes demonstrated that AOB abundance was significantly higher in the high N-loading treatments than in the control for the QY soil only, while no significant difference among treatments in the SY and FQ soils. A significant positive correlation between PNR and AOB amoA abundance, however, was found for the SY and FQ soils, but not for the QY soil. Little difference in AOA amoA abundance between different N-loading treatments was observed for all the soils.

Conclusions

This study suggested that ammonia oxidation capacity in the FQ and SY soils was higher than those in the QY soil with the addition of ammonium fertilizer for a short-term. These findings indicated that understanding the differential responses of biological nitrification to varying input levels of ammonium fertilizer is important for maximizing N use efficiency and thereby improving agricultural fertilization management.  相似文献   

18.
土地利用方式对万木林土壤氨氧化微生物丰度的影响   总被引:3,自引:1,他引:2  
黄蓉  张金波  钟文辉  贾仲君  蔡祖聪 《土壤》2012,44(4):581-587
以我国亚热带地区典型花岗岩发育酸性红壤为研究对象,选取福建建瓯万木林自然保护区封禁保护下5种自然植被和1种人工种植植被土壤,采用荧光实时定量PCR(Real-time PCR)技术测定了土壤氨氧化细菌(AOB)和氨氧化古菌(AOA)的群落丰度,采用15N稳定同位素成对标记和数值模型相结合的方法测定了土壤初级硝化速率。结果显示,长期封禁保护下的自然植被土壤pH低,土壤AOB数量偏低。人为种植和管理显著提高了土壤pH,促进了AOB的生长,其丰度比自然条件下提高了2个数量级,土壤初级硝化速率也显著提高,并与AOB数量存在显著的相关性,表明AOB是硝化作用的主要贡献者。5种自然植被条件下AOA的amoA基因拷贝数占泉古菌16S rRNA基因的比例都小于1%(0.01%~0.64%),在农业利用方式下上升到5.32%,表明并非所有泉古菌都具备氨氧化功能基因amoA,氮肥施用可能促进了氨氧化古菌的生长。  相似文献   

19.
The effects of long-term fertilization of acidic soils on ammonia-oxidizing archaea (AOA) and bacteria (AOB) communities and its ecological implications remain poorly understood. We chose an acidic upland soil site under long-term (27-year) fertilization to investigate ammonia oxidizer communities under four different regimes: mineral N fertilizer (N), mineral NPK fertilizer (NPK), organic manure (OM) and an unfertilized control (CK). Soil net nitrification rates were significantly higher in OM soils than in CK, N or NPK soils. Quantitative analysis of the distribution of amoA genes by DNA-based stable isotope probing revealed that AOA dominate in CK, N and NPK soils, while AOB dominate in OM soils. Denaturing gradient gel electrophoresis and clone library analyses of amoA genes revealed that Group 1.1a-associated AOA (also referred to as Nitrosotalea) were the most dominant active AOA population (>92%), while Nitrosospira Cluster 3 and Cluster 9 were predominant among active AOB communities. The functional diversity of active ammonia oxidizers in acidic soils is affected by long-term fertilization practices, and the responses of active ammonia oxidizers to mineral fertilizer and organic manure are clearly different. Our results provide strong evidence that AOA are more highly adapted to growth at low pH and low substrate availability than AOB, and they suggest that the niche differentiation and metabolic diversity of ammonia oxidizers in acidic soils are more complex than previously thought.  相似文献   

20.
Ammonia oxidation is a critical step in the soil nitrogen (N) cycle and can be affected by the application of mineral fertilizers or organic manure. However, little is known about the rhizosphere effect on the function and structure of ammonia-oxidizing bacterial (AOB) and archaeal (AOA) communities, the most important organisms responsible for ammonia oxidation in agricultural ecosystems. Here, the potential nitrification activity (PNA), population size and composition of AOB and AOA communities in both the rhizosphere and bulk soil from a long-term (31-year) fertilizer field experiment conducted during two seasons (wheat and maize) were investigated using the shaken slurry method, quantitative real-time polymerase chain reaction and denaturing gradient gel electrophoresis. N fertilization greatly enhanced PNA and AOB abundance, while manure application increased AOA abundance. The community structure of AOB exhibited more obvious shifts than that of AOA after long-term fertilization, resulting in more abundant AOB phylotypes similar to Nitrosospira clusters 3 and 4 in the N-fertilized treatments. Moreover, PNA was closely correlated with the abundance and community structure of AOB rather than that of AOA among soils during both seasons, indicating that AOB play an active role in ammonia oxidation. Conversely, the PNA and population sizes of AOB and AOA were typically higher in the rhizosphere than the bulk soil, implying a significant rhizosphere effect on ammonia oxidation. Cluster and redundancy analyses further showed that this rhizosphere effect played a more important role in shaping AOA community structure than long-term fertilization. Overall, the results indicate that AOB rather than AOA functionally dominate ammonia oxidation in the calcareous fluvo-aquic soil, and that rhizosphere effect and fertilization regime play different roles in the activity and community structures of AOB and AOA.  相似文献   

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