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1.
To estimate diversity, seasonal variation, and phylogeny of the cyanobacterial communities in rice straw placed in nylon mesh bags and left on the soil surface of a paddy field, total DNA was extracted from straw, amplified by polymerase chain reaction targeting 16S rRNA genes of cyanobacteria, and the amplicons were separated by denaturing gradient gel electrophoresis (DGGE). These DGGE bands were sequenced. The paddy field was under flooded condition after transplanting of rice (Experiment 1) and under drained conditions after harvest (Experiment 2). The residual samples on the soil surface under upland conditions were collected just before spring plowing and were placed again on the soil surface after transplanting under flooded conditions. DGGE band patterns of cyanobacterial communities of rice straw were different under drained conditions, under flooded conditions when fresh rice straw samples were placed (Experiment 1), and under flooded conditions when residual rice straw samples were replaced (Experiment 2), indicating that the communities were influenced by both water regime of the paddy field and the degree of the rice straw decomposition. Sequence analysis of DGGE bands indicated that most of the cyanobacteria in rice straw on the soil surface in the paddy field were filamentous members belonging to Subsections III and IV. Filamentous cyanobacterial cells were observed in rice straw under flooded conditions by epifluorescence microscopy.  相似文献   

2.
The succession and phylogenetic profile of eukaryotic communities during the composting process of rice straw (RS) were studied by applying polymerase chain reaction-denaturing gradient gel electrophoresis (PCR-DGGE) analysis followed by sequencing of 18S rDNA. Principal component analysis and cluster analysis of the DGGE band patterns of eukaryotic communities resulted in exactly the same grouping as found with phospholipid fatty acid (PLFA) analysis (Cahyani et al. in Soil Sci Plant Nutr 48:735, 2002) and by the DGGE pattern analysis of the bacterial communities (Cahyani et al. in Soil Sci Plant Nutr 49:619, 2003) for the same samples, namely the communities characterizing the pre-composting stage (initial RS materials), and thermophilic, middle, and curing stages of the compost. Different eukaryotic members characterized the respective stages as follows: fungi (Ascomycota) for the initial RS materials, protozoans (Apicomplexa) as well as the fungi (Ascomycota) of the initial RS materials for the thermophilic stage, fungi (Ascomycota and Basidiomycota), protozoans (Opalozoa, Ciliophora and Leptomyxida), nematodes and stramenopiles for the middle stage, and fungi (Ascomycota, Zygomycota and Oomycota), algae (Haptophyceae and Chrysophyceae), and nematodes for the curing stage, respectively. Temperature, moisture content, and substrates available seemed to play a key role in determining the composition of eukaryotic members present at the respective stages of the composting process of RS.  相似文献   

3.
To identify the microbial communities responsible for the decomposition of rice straw compost in soil during the rice cultivation period, phospholipid fatty acid (PLFA) composition of rice straw compost was determined by periodically sampling the compost from a Japanese rice field under flooded conditions. About 21% of the compost was decomposed within a period of 3 months. The total amount of PLFAs, as an indicator of microbial biomass, was significantly lower under drained conditions than under flooded conditions and was relatively constant during the flooding period. This indicates that the microbial biomass in the compost samples did not increase during the gradual decomposition of rice straw compost under flooded conditions. The proportion of branched-chain PLFAs (biomarker of Grampositive and anaerobic Gram-negative bacteria) slightly decreased during the early period after placement, and increased gradually afterwards. Among the branched-chain PLFAs, i15:0, ail5:0, i16:0 and i17:0 PLFAs predominated and their proportions increased gradually except for i16:0. The proportion of straight mono-unsaturated PLFAs (biomarker of Gramnegative bacteria) was almost constant throughout the period, and 18:1ω9 and 18:1ω7 PLFAs predominated. The proportion of straight poly-unsaturated PLFAs as a biomarker of eukaryotes including fungi was also constant throughout the period, except for a decrease under drained conditions. Straight poly-unsaturated PLFAs consisted mainly of 18:2ω6c PLFA. Therefore, these results suggest that the proportions of Gram-positive and anaerobic Gram-negative bacteria increased during the decomposition of rice straw compost in flooded paddy field. Statistical analyses enabled to divide PLFA patterns of microbiota in the rice straw compost into two groups, one group consisting of rice straw compost samples collected before mid-season drainage and the other of samples collected after mid-season drainage. Small squared distances among samples in cluster analysis indicated that the community structure of microbiota was similar to each other as a whole. These results suggest that the microbial communities changed gradually during the period of placement, and that mid-season drainage may have affected the community structure of microbiota. Principal component analysis of the PLFA composition suggested that the succession of microbiota along with the decomposition in flooded soil was similar between rice straw compost and rice straw and that the changes in the community structure during the decomposition in flooded soil were more conspicuous for rice straw than for rice straw compost.  相似文献   

4.
Phylogenetic positions of characteristic bands of 16S rDNA that were obtained from the floodwater of a Japanese paddy field by denaturing gradient gel electrophoresis (DGGE) analysis in a previous work (Biol Fertil Soils 36:306–312, 2002) were determined to identify dominant bacterial members in the floodwater. Sequences of DGGE bands were affiliated with the CytophagaFlavobacteriumBacteroides group, β-Proteobacteria, and Actinobacteria and showed phylogenetically close relationships with species inhabiting other aquatic environments, although most of their closest relatives were uncultured bacterial clones.  相似文献   

5.
To estimate the microbial communities responsible for rice straw decomposition in paddy field, phospholipid fatty acid (PLFA) composition of leaf sheaths and blades was analyzed during the decomposition of both residues under upland conditions after harvest and under flooded conditions at the time of transplanting of rice plants. In addition, rice straw that had been placed in the field under upland conditions (November to April) was taken out in spring, and placed again in the same field under flooded conditions at the time of transplanting. High proportions of the branched-chain PLFAs were observed under flooded conditions (June to September); the proportions of straight mono-unsaturated and straight poly-unsaturated PLFAs were high under upland conditions in the winter season for 4 months. The dominant PLFAs in straight mono-unsaturated, straight poly-unsaturated and branched-chain PLFA groups were 18:19, 18:17 and 16:17c, 18:26c and i15:0, i17:0 and ai15:0, respectively, under both upland and flooded conditions. These findings indicated the important roles of Gram-negative bacteria and fungi under upland conditions and of Gram-positive bacteria and anaerobic Gram-negative bacteria under flooded conditions. Cluster analysis of PLFA composition showed the difference of community structure of microbiota in rice straw between upland and flooded conditions. In addition principal component analysis revealed the difference between leaf sheaths and blades under upland conditions and indicated that the content of straight unsaturated PLFAs (sheaths > blades) characterized their community structures.  相似文献   

6.
Plant residues (PRs) are “hot spots” of microbial activities in soil. PRs with the size more than 0.5 mm were collected from a Japanese paddy field during rice cultivation period (from May to September) and fractionated into four categories by size (>4, 2-4, 1-2, and 0.5-1 mm) using sieves. Restriction fragment length polymorphism (RFLP) and denaturing gradient gel electrophoresis (DGGE) patterns were compared among the fractions after DNA extraction from the PRs and PCR amplification. The total amount of PRs with the size over 0.5 mm decreased in the field with the first-order kinetics (r2=0.810, p<0.01) with time from rice transplanting to harvest. RFLP analysis showed that the bacterial community structure in PRs with the 0.5-2 mm fraction was different from that in PRs with the >2 mm fraction and the latter community structure changed after the midseason drainage. In contrast, the DGGE patterns of the bacterial community in the PRs indicated the succession from June to September during rice cultivation forming three major groups irrespective of the fraction size. Sequence analysis of DGGE bands showed that Firmicutes (clostridia), α-, γ-, δ-Proteobacteria (myxobacteria), Nitrospira, Acidobacteria, Bacteroidetes, Verrucomicrobia and Spirochaetes were predominant members in the PRs irrespective of fraction size.  相似文献   

7.
8.
To estimate the succession and phylogenetic composition of the bacterial communities responsible for the decomposition of rice straw compost under flooded conditions during the cultivation period of paddy rice, denaturing gradient gel electrophoresis (DGGE) analyses targeting 16S rDNA and 16S rRNA, followed by sequencing were conducted in a Japanese paddy field. The DGGE bands of the bacterial communities in the rice straw compost were significantly more numerous in the DNA samples than in the RNA samples. Although the band number of the DNA samples was almost constant throughout the period, RNA samples showed fewer DGGE bands after mid-season drainage than before it. Thus, about 81% of the bacteria present in rice straw compost were considered to be metabolically "active" before mid-season drainage and about 62% after it. The changes in the DGGE patterns of bacterial DNA and RNA before and after mid-season drainage, respectively, were also revealed by cluster analysis and principal component analysis of the DGGE patterns. These results indicated that the bacterial communities of rice straw compost incorporated into flooded paddy fields changed gradually along with the decomposition, except for the period of mid-season drainage, but that they were influenced by mid-season drainage. Members of β-, γ- and δ-Proteobacteria, Cytophaga-Flavobacterium-Bacteroides (CFB) group, Chlorobia, Verrucomicrobia, Chloroflexi, Spirochaetes, Firmicutes (clostridia) and Actinobacteria were present during the decomposition of rice straw compost. Characteristic "active" bacteria among them were as follows: Clostridium, Acinetobacter (γ-Proteobacteria) and β-Proteobacteria before mid-season drainage, Flavobacterium, Chondromyces , Chlorflexi and δ-Proteobacteria after mid-season drainage, and Spirochaeta and myxobacteria throughout the period.  相似文献   

9.
Community structure of methanogenic archaea in paddy field soil under double cropping (rice [Oryza sativa L.] and wheat [Triticum aestivum L.]) was studied by the denaturing gradient gel electrophoresis (DGGE) method. Soil samples under flooded and upland conditions were collected 7 and 6 times, respectively, from two paddy fields throughout a year, and two primer sets, 0357F-GC/0691R and newly designed 1106F-GC/1378R, were used for DGGE analysis. The 25 and 29 different bands were observed on the DGGE gels with the primers 0357F-GC/0691R and 1106F-GC/1378R, respectively. DGGE band patterns of the methanogenic archaeal community were stable throughout a year including the cultivation periods of rice under flooded conditions and of wheat under upland conditions. Cluster analysis and principal component analysis suggested that the difference in the soil type (sampling region) largely influenced the community structures of methanogenic archaea in paddy field soil, while the effects of sampling period and different fertilizer treatments on them were small. Most of the sequences obtained from the DGGE bands were closely related to Methanomicrobiales, Methanosarcinaceae, Methanosaetaceae and Rice cluster-I.  相似文献   

10.
Rice straw including leaf sheaths and blades put in nylon mesh bags was placed in the plow layer of a Japanese paddy field after harvest under upland conditions and after transplanting of rice seedlings under flooded conditions. In addition, rice straw that was decomposed under the upland conditions during the off-crop season in winter was placed again in soil at the time of transplanting. The materials were collected periodically to analyze the community structure of the bacteria and fungi responsible for rice straw decomposition by PCR-RFLP analysis. The PCR products with 27f and 1492r primers designed for bacterial 16S rDNA and with EF3 and EF4 primers designed for fungal 18S rDNA were digested with four restriction endonucleases (Hinf I, Sau3A I, Hae III, EeoR I). Bacterial communities in the decomposing rice straw were different from each other between upland and flooded conditions, between leaf sheaths and blades, and between straw samples with and without decomposition under upland conditions during the off-crop season. Fungal communities in the decomposing rice straw were also different between the leaf sheaths and blades under upland soil conditions. Score plots of bacterial and fungal communities in the principal component analysis were separated from the plot of the straw materials along with the duration of the placement, indicating the succession of bacterial and fungal communities in decomposing rice straw with time.  相似文献   

11.
ABSTRACT

Redox cycle of iron (Fe) is the central process in the biogeochemistry of paddy field soil. Although Fe(II)-oxidizing process is mediated by both abiotic and biotic reactions, microorganisms involved in the process have not been well studied in paddy field soil. The present study investigated the community structure of microaerophilic Fe(II)-oxidizing bacteria (FeOB) in the family Gallionellaceae in the plow layer of paddy fields located in the central (Anjo) and northeastern (Omagari) Japan since the members in the family are the typical FeOB in circumneutral freshwater environments and possibly have the significant role for Fe(II) oxidation in paddy field soils. A primer set targeting 16S rRNA gene of Gallionella-related FeOB was newly designed for the polymerase chain reaction-denaturing gradient gel electrophoresis (PCR-DGGE) and quantitative PCR (qPCR) analyses. DGGE analysis showed significant differences in the band patterns between the field sites. Besides, minor differences were observed in the patterns between the soil depths (0–1 cm and below 1 cm) in the Anjo field, while the patterns were relatively stable in the Omagari field during the annual rice cultivation practices. In total 54 bands were sequenced and clustered into 20 operational taxonomic units (OTUs) on the basis of the 97% similarity. Eighteen out of twenty OTUs (50 of 54 bands) were affiliated within the FeOB cluster of Gallionellaceae, some of which were clustered with known microaerophilic FeOB, Ferrigenium kumadai, Ferriphaselus amnicola, ‘Sideroxydans lithotrophicus’ and ‘S. paludicola’. The number of the 16S rRNA gene copies was 105–107 and 106–108 copies g?1 dried soil in the two paddy fields and negatively correlated to the contents of acetate-extractable Fe(II) in the soils during the rice cultivation period. These results suggested inhabitance of considerable number of diverse Gallionella-related FeOB and their potential involvement in the Fe(II)-oxidizing process of soil, especially during the rice cultivation period in the paddy field soils.  相似文献   

12.
Abstract

The present study examined T4-type phage communities in rice straw (RS) under the composting process by analyzing the composition of the major capsid gene (g23) of T4-type bacteriophages. The g23 clones were obtained from RS throughout the composting process from RS materials to composting RS in the curing stage (for 124?days). Most of the g23 clones were phylogenetically closely related to those in rice field soils and rice field floodwaters, and Paddy Groups II and III appeared to characterize the g23 genes in the composting RS. The diversity of g23 genes in the composting RS was highest in the RS material (day 0 after the onset of composting) and in the early thermophilic stage (day 7), and decreased markedly in the middle and curing stages. This change was in contrast to that of the bacterial community, which showed higher diversity in the middle and curing stages. There was no specific clone that characterized any stage during the composting process. These findings indicate that the phage community is not the major controlling agent in determining eubacterial succession and that the thermophilic stage in the composting process efficiently annihilated T4-type phages in the composting pile.  相似文献   

13.
The present study examined T4-type phage communities in rice straw (RS) under the composting process by analyzing the composition of the major capsid gene ( g23 ) of T4-type bacteriophages. The g23 clones were obtained from RS throughout the composting process from RS materials to composting RS in the curing stage (for 124 days). Most of the g23 clones were phylogenetically closely related to those in rice field soils and rice field floodwaters, and Paddy Groups II and III appeared to characterize the g23 genes in the composting RS. The diversity of g23 genes in the composting RS was highest in the RS material (day 0 after the onset of composting) and in the early thermophilic stage (day 7), and decreased markedly in the middle and curing stages. This change was in contrast to that of the bacterial community, which showed higher diversity in the middle and curing stages. There was no specific clone that characterized any stage during the composting process. These findings indicate that the phage community is not the major controlling agent in determining eubacterial succession and that the thermophilic stage in the composting process efficiently annihilated T4-type phages in the composting pile.  相似文献   

14.
15.
The succession of responsible microbiota during the composting process of rice straw (RS) was studied for 145 d in relation to the changes in the organic constituents of RS. During the composting process, the C / N ratio of RS decreased from 56 to 22. On a C basis, the relative contents of lipid, water-soluble organic matter (WSOM), hemicellulose, cellulose, and lignin fractions in RS changed from 5.6, 8.9, 32.9, 17.9, and 34.0%, to 7.3, 5.8, 30.7, 3.8, and 51.1%, respectively, indicating that the cellulose fraction was mainly decomposed in the composting process. Biomass C accounted for 18.3% (on day 75 when the total amount of phospholipid fatty acids (PLFAs) reached a peak) and 11.5% (at the end of composting) of the total C of RS under the composting process. As for PLFAs, the biomarkers of fungi and Gram-negative bacteria predominated in the RS material used. At the thermophilic stage (the first 2 weeks), biomarkers of Gram-positive bacteria and actinomycetes predominated. After the thermophilic stage, biomarkers of other Gram-positive bacteria became dominant. Finally, at the curing stage, the proportion of the biomarkers of Gram-negative bacteria and eukaryotes increased, indicating the co-contribution of Gram-positive and Gram-negative bacteria and fungi in the decomposition process at this stage. The trans / cis ratio of 16 : 1ω7 PLFA of RS under the composting process ranged from 0.18 to 0.30, indicating that the composting process of RS prepared a significantly lower environmental stress (p < 0.01) compared to the decomposition of RS in a submerged paddy soil.  相似文献   

16.
ABSTRACT

The influence of the long-term combination of rice straw removal and rice straw compost application on methane (CH4) and nitrous oxide (N2O) emissions and soil carbon accumulation in rice paddy fields was clarified. In each of the initial and continuous application fields (3 and 39?51 years, respectively), three plots with different applications of organic matter were established, namely, rice straw application (RS), rice straw compost application (SC) and no application (NA) plots, and soil carbon storage (0?15 cm), rice grain yield and CH4 and N2O fluxes were measured for three years. The soil carbon sequestration rate by the organic matter application was higher in the SC plot than in the RS plot for both the initial and continuous application fields, and it was lower in the continuous application field than in the initial application field. The rice grain yield in the SC plot was significantly higher than those in the other plots in both the initial and continuous application fields. Cumulative CH4 emissions followed the order of the NA plot < the SC plot < the RS plot for both the initial and continuous application fields. The effect of the organic matter application on the N2O emissions was not clear. In both the initial and continuous application fields, the increase in CH4 emission by the rice straw application exceeded the soil carbon sequestration rate, and the change in the net greenhouse gas (GHG) balance calculated by the difference between them was a positive, indicating a net increase in the GHG emissions. However, the change in the GHG balance by the rice straw compost application showed negative (mitigating GHG emissions) for the initial application field, whereas it showed positive for the continuous application field. Although the mitigation effect on the GHG emissions by the combination of the rice straw removal and rice straw compost application was reduced by 21% after 39 years long-term application, it is suggested that the combination treatment is a sustainable management that can mitigate GHG emissions and improve crop productivity.  相似文献   

17.
Capsid size distributions of viral communities in the floodwater of a Japanese paddy field under a long-term fertilizer trial were surveyed during the rice cultivation period by using transmission electron microscopy. The capsid size distributions were monophasic, and the median values fell within the range of 50-70 nm. The quartile intervals were narrow from either 40-50 nm or 50-60 nm to either 60-70 nm or 70-80 nm for most samples. There was no clear seasonal variation in the capsid size distribution of viral communities. The difference in size distributions among different fertilizer plots was also not found. Viral communities in the floodwater were predominated by isometric icosahedral forms. Viruses with octahedral capsids and elongated ones were rare and sporadic in the floodwater.  相似文献   

18.
19.
20.
Abstract

Methane-oxidizing bacteria (MOB) are crucial to the reduction of CH4 emitted to the atmosphere. However, it is unclear how MOB in rice straw are affected by straw decomposition processes. In a Japanese rice field, a year-round experiment was set up to study the effects of agricultural practice (rice cultivation/winter fallow), straw parts (leaf sheath/blade) and the site of straw placement (plow layer/soil surface) on MOB communities in rice straw using denaturing gradient gel electrophoresis (DGGE) and DNA sequencing analyses of key MOB functional genes (pmoA and amoA). Thirty-eight different DGGE bands were observed over the entire investigation period. Principal component analysis of DGGE pattern suggested that agricultural practice is the key factor regulating the MOB communities. Sequencing of dominant DGGE bands showed that: (1) during the rice cultivation period, methanotrophs (particularly type I methanotrophs) dominated the MOB community, (2) during the winter fallow season both type I and type II methanotrophs were dominant in sheath segments placed both on the soil surface and in the plow layer, whereas ammonia oxidizers seemed to dominate blade segments placed in the plow layer. Alignment of diagnostic amino acid sequences of MOB suggested the presence of novel ammonia oxidizers in rice straw in rice fields.  相似文献   

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