Inconsistent effects of agricultural practices on soil fungal communities across twelve European long‐term experiments
Cropping practices have a great potential to improve soil quality through changes in soil biota. Yet the effects of these soil improving cropping systems on soil fungal communities are not well known. Here, we analysed soil fungal communities using standardized measurements in 12 long‐term experimen...
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Zusammenfassung: | Cropping practices have a great potential to improve soil quality through
changes in soil biota. Yet the effects of these soil improving cropping
systems on soil fungal communities are not well known. Here, we analysed
soil fungal communities using standardized measurements in 12 long‐term
experiments and 20 agricultural treatments across Europe. We were
interested in whether the same practices (i.e. tillage, fertilization,
organic amendments and cover crops) applied across different sites have
predictable and repeatable effects on soil fungal communities and guilds.
The fungal communities were very variable across sites located in
different soil types and climatic regions. The arbuscular mycorrhizal
fungi (AMF) were the fungal guild with most unique species in individual
sites while plant pathogenic fungi were most shared between the sites. The
fungal communities responded to the cropping practices differently in
different sites and only fertilization showed a consistent effect on AMF
and plant pathogenic fungi while the response to tillage, cover crops and
organic amendments were site, soil and crop species specific. We further
show that the crop yield is negatively affected by cropping practices
aimed at improving soil health. Yet, we show that these practices have the
potential to change the fungal communities and that change in plant
pathogenic fungi and in AMF is linked to the yield. We further link the
soil fungal community and guilds to soil abiotic characteristics and
reveal that especially Mn, K, Mg and pH affect the composition of fungi
across sites. In summary, we show that fungal communities vary
considerably between sites and that there are no clear directional
responses in fungi or fungal guilds across sites to soil improving
cropping systems but that the responses vary based on soil abiotic
conditions, crop type, and climatic conditions. Details on experiments
related to the data is provided in supplementary materials of the related
article |
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DOI: | 10.5061/dryad.kh189324t |