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Underexplored microbial metabolisms for enhanced nutrient recycling in agricultural soils

Worldwide, arable soils have been degraded through erosion and exhaustive cultivation, and substantial proportions of fertilizer nutrients are not taken up by crops. A central challenge in agriculture is to understand how soils and resident microbial communities can be managed to deliver nutrients t...

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Autores principales: Bhowmik, Arnab, Cloutier, Mara, Ball, Emily, Bruns, Mary Ann
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: AIMS Press 2017
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6604955/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31294192
http://dx.doi.org/10.3934/microbiol.2017.4.826
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author Bhowmik, Arnab
Cloutier, Mara
Ball, Emily
Bruns, Mary Ann
author_facet Bhowmik, Arnab
Cloutier, Mara
Ball, Emily
Bruns, Mary Ann
author_sort Bhowmik, Arnab
collection PubMed
description Worldwide, arable soils have been degraded through erosion and exhaustive cultivation, and substantial proportions of fertilizer nutrients are not taken up by crops. A central challenge in agriculture is to understand how soils and resident microbial communities can be managed to deliver nutrients to crops more efficiently with minimal losses to the environment. Throughout much of the twentieth century, intensive farming has caused substantial loss of organic matter and soil biological function. Today, more farmers recognize the importance of protecting soils and restoring organic matter through reduced tillage, diversified crop rotation, cover cropping, and increased organic amendments. Such management practices are expected to foster soil conditions more similar to those of undisturbed, native plant-soil systems by restoring soil biophysical integrity and re-establishing plant-microbe interactions that retain and recycle nutrients. Soil conditions which could contribute to desirable shifts in microbial metabolic processes include lower redox potentials, more diverse biogeochemical gradients, higher concentrations of labile carbon, and enrichment of carbon dioxide (CO(2)) and hydrogen gas (H(2)) in soil pores. This paper reviews recent literature on generalized and specific microbial processes that could become more operational once soils are no longer subjected to intensive tillage and organic matter depletion. These processes include heterotrophic assimilation of CO(2); utilization of H(2) as electron donor or reactant; and more diversified nitrogen uptake and dissimilation pathways. Despite knowledge of these processes occurring in laboratory studies, they have received little attention for their potential to affect nutrient and energy flows in soils. This paper explores how soil microbial processes could contribute to in situ nutrient retention, recycling, and crop uptake in agricultural soils managed for improved biological function.
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spelling pubmed-66049552019-07-10 Underexplored microbial metabolisms for enhanced nutrient recycling in agricultural soils Bhowmik, Arnab Cloutier, Mara Ball, Emily Bruns, Mary Ann AIMS Microbiol Review Worldwide, arable soils have been degraded through erosion and exhaustive cultivation, and substantial proportions of fertilizer nutrients are not taken up by crops. A central challenge in agriculture is to understand how soils and resident microbial communities can be managed to deliver nutrients to crops more efficiently with minimal losses to the environment. Throughout much of the twentieth century, intensive farming has caused substantial loss of organic matter and soil biological function. Today, more farmers recognize the importance of protecting soils and restoring organic matter through reduced tillage, diversified crop rotation, cover cropping, and increased organic amendments. Such management practices are expected to foster soil conditions more similar to those of undisturbed, native plant-soil systems by restoring soil biophysical integrity and re-establishing plant-microbe interactions that retain and recycle nutrients. Soil conditions which could contribute to desirable shifts in microbial metabolic processes include lower redox potentials, more diverse biogeochemical gradients, higher concentrations of labile carbon, and enrichment of carbon dioxide (CO(2)) and hydrogen gas (H(2)) in soil pores. This paper reviews recent literature on generalized and specific microbial processes that could become more operational once soils are no longer subjected to intensive tillage and organic matter depletion. These processes include heterotrophic assimilation of CO(2); utilization of H(2) as electron donor or reactant; and more diversified nitrogen uptake and dissimilation pathways. Despite knowledge of these processes occurring in laboratory studies, they have received little attention for their potential to affect nutrient and energy flows in soils. This paper explores how soil microbial processes could contribute to in situ nutrient retention, recycling, and crop uptake in agricultural soils managed for improved biological function. AIMS Press 2017-10-13 /pmc/articles/PMC6604955/ /pubmed/31294192 http://dx.doi.org/10.3934/microbiol.2017.4.826 Text en © 2017 Mary Ann Bruns, et al., licensee AIMS Press This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0)
spellingShingle Review
Bhowmik, Arnab
Cloutier, Mara
Ball, Emily
Bruns, Mary Ann
Underexplored microbial metabolisms for enhanced nutrient recycling in agricultural soils
title Underexplored microbial metabolisms for enhanced nutrient recycling in agricultural soils
title_full Underexplored microbial metabolisms for enhanced nutrient recycling in agricultural soils
title_fullStr Underexplored microbial metabolisms for enhanced nutrient recycling in agricultural soils
title_full_unstemmed Underexplored microbial metabolisms for enhanced nutrient recycling in agricultural soils
title_short Underexplored microbial metabolisms for enhanced nutrient recycling in agricultural soils
title_sort underexplored microbial metabolisms for enhanced nutrient recycling in agricultural soils
topic Review
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6604955/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31294192
http://dx.doi.org/10.3934/microbiol.2017.4.826
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