Relationships between field management, soil health, and microbial community composition

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DOI

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.apsoil.2019.06.012

Language of the publication
English
Date
2019-07-09
Type
Article
Author(s)
  • Mann, Carolyn
  • Lynch, Derek
  • Fillmore, Sherry
  • Mills, Aaron
Publisher
Elsevier

Alternative title

Relationships between field management, soil health, and microbial community composition

Abstract

More meaningful and useful soil health tests are needed to enable better on-farm soil management. Our objective was to assess the relationship between field management, soil health, and soil microbial abundance and com- position (phospholipid fatty acid analysis (PLFA)) in soil collected from two fields (farmer-designated ‘good’ versus ‘poor’) across 34 diverse (livestock, grain or vegetable cropping) farms in Maritime Canada. Soil health was measured using soil texture, surface hardness, available water capacity, water stable aggregates, organic matter, soil protein, soil respiration, active carbon, and standard nutrient analysis. All soils were medium to coarse textured (< 8% clay). Mixed models analysis showed that both CSHA and PLFA were able to resolve statistical differences between cropping systems, however conventional soil chemical analysis was the only testing method to resolve statistical differences between farmer designated ‘good’ and ‘poor’ fields. Principle component analyses determined management history (rotation over previous three years), but not ‘good’ or ‘poor’ field designation, to be an important determinant of soil health. Water-stable aggregates and soil re- spiration were positively correlated with all PLFA microbial groups, and negatively correlated with sand, P, Cu and Al. Lower-intensity management (perennial forage, mixed annual-perennial cropping), manure application and low tillage were linked to higher soil respiration, water-stable aggregates, fungi, mycorrhizae, Gram ne- gative bacteria, and lower soil available P. Correlations between CSHA and PLFA shows promise for integrating these two tests for improved soil health assessment.

Subject

  • Agriculture

Keywords

  • soil health,
  • phospholipid fatty acid analysis,
  • agricultural intensity

Peer review

Yes

Open access level

Gold

Identifiers

ISSN
1873-0272

Article

Journal title
Applied Soil Ecology
Journal volume
144

Citation(s)

Mann, C., Lynch, D., Fillmore, S., & Mills, A. (2019). Relationships between field management, Soil Health, and Microbial Community Composition. Applied Soil Ecology, 144, 12–21. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.apsoil.2019.06.012

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Soils

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