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Beneficial Effects of Mixing Kentucky Bluegrass With Red Fescue via Plant-Soil Interactions in Black Soil of Northeast China

Continuous monoculture of cool-season turfgrass causes soil degradation, and visual turf quality decline is a major concern in black soil regions of Northeast China. Turf mixtures can enhance turfgrass resistance to biotic and abiotic stresses and increase soil microbial diversity. Understanding mec...

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Autores principales: Xie, Fuchun, Zhang, Gaoyun, Zheng, Qianjiao, Liu, Kemeng, Yin, Xiujie, Sun, Xiaoyang, Saud, Shah, Shi, Zhenjie, Yuan, Runli, Deng, Wenjing, Zhang, Lu, Cui, Guowen, Chen, Yajun
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Frontiers Media S.A. 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7656059/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33193137
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fmicb.2020.556118
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author Xie, Fuchun
Zhang, Gaoyun
Zheng, Qianjiao
Liu, Kemeng
Yin, Xiujie
Sun, Xiaoyang
Saud, Shah
Shi, Zhenjie
Yuan, Runli
Deng, Wenjing
Zhang, Lu
Cui, Guowen
Chen, Yajun
author_facet Xie, Fuchun
Zhang, Gaoyun
Zheng, Qianjiao
Liu, Kemeng
Yin, Xiujie
Sun, Xiaoyang
Saud, Shah
Shi, Zhenjie
Yuan, Runli
Deng, Wenjing
Zhang, Lu
Cui, Guowen
Chen, Yajun
author_sort Xie, Fuchun
collection PubMed
description Continuous monoculture of cool-season turfgrass causes soil degradation, and visual turf quality decline is a major concern in black soil regions of Northeast China. Turf mixtures can enhance turfgrass resistance to biotic and abiotic stresses and increase soil microbial diversity. Understanding mechanism by plant-soil interactions and changes of black soil microbial communities in turf mixture is beneficial to restoring the degradation of urbanized black soils and maintaining sustainable development of urban landscape ecology. In this study, based on the previous research of different sowing models, two schemes of turf monoculture and mixture were conducted in field plots during 2016–2018 in a black soil of Heilongjiang province of Northeast China. The mixture turf was established by mixing 50% Kentucky bluegrass “Midnight” (Poa pratensis L.) with 50% Red fescue “Frigg” (Festuca rubra L.); and the monoculture turf was established by sowing with pure Kentucky bluegrass. Turf performance, soil physiochemical properties, and microbial composition from rhizosphere were investigated. Soil microbial communities and abundance were analyzed by Illumina MiSeq sequencing and quantitative PCR methods. Results showed that turfgrass quality, turfgrass biomass, soil organic matter (SOM), urease, alkaline phosphatase, invertase, and catalase activities increased in PF mixture, but disease percentage and soil pH decreased. The microbial diversity was also significantly enhanced under turf mixture model. The microbial community compositions were significantly different between the two schemes. Turf mixtures obviously increased the abundances of Beauveria, Lysobacter, Chryseolinea, and Gemmatimonas spp., while remarkably reduced the abundances of Myrothecium and Epicoccum spp. Redundancy analysis showed that the compositions of bacteria and fungi were related to edaphic parameters, such as SOM, pH, and enzyme activities. Since the increasing of turf quality, biomass, and disease resistance were highly correlated with the changes of soil physiochemical parameters and microbial communities in turf mixture, which suggested that turf mixture with two species (i.e., Kentucky blue grass and Red fescue) changed soil microbial communities and enhanced visual turfgrass qualities through positive plant-soil interactions by soil biota.
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spelling pubmed-76560592020-11-13 Beneficial Effects of Mixing Kentucky Bluegrass With Red Fescue via Plant-Soil Interactions in Black Soil of Northeast China Xie, Fuchun Zhang, Gaoyun Zheng, Qianjiao Liu, Kemeng Yin, Xiujie Sun, Xiaoyang Saud, Shah Shi, Zhenjie Yuan, Runli Deng, Wenjing Zhang, Lu Cui, Guowen Chen, Yajun Front Microbiol Microbiology Continuous monoculture of cool-season turfgrass causes soil degradation, and visual turf quality decline is a major concern in black soil regions of Northeast China. Turf mixtures can enhance turfgrass resistance to biotic and abiotic stresses and increase soil microbial diversity. Understanding mechanism by plant-soil interactions and changes of black soil microbial communities in turf mixture is beneficial to restoring the degradation of urbanized black soils and maintaining sustainable development of urban landscape ecology. In this study, based on the previous research of different sowing models, two schemes of turf monoculture and mixture were conducted in field plots during 2016–2018 in a black soil of Heilongjiang province of Northeast China. The mixture turf was established by mixing 50% Kentucky bluegrass “Midnight” (Poa pratensis L.) with 50% Red fescue “Frigg” (Festuca rubra L.); and the monoculture turf was established by sowing with pure Kentucky bluegrass. Turf performance, soil physiochemical properties, and microbial composition from rhizosphere were investigated. Soil microbial communities and abundance were analyzed by Illumina MiSeq sequencing and quantitative PCR methods. Results showed that turfgrass quality, turfgrass biomass, soil organic matter (SOM), urease, alkaline phosphatase, invertase, and catalase activities increased in PF mixture, but disease percentage and soil pH decreased. The microbial diversity was also significantly enhanced under turf mixture model. The microbial community compositions were significantly different between the two schemes. Turf mixtures obviously increased the abundances of Beauveria, Lysobacter, Chryseolinea, and Gemmatimonas spp., while remarkably reduced the abundances of Myrothecium and Epicoccum spp. Redundancy analysis showed that the compositions of bacteria and fungi were related to edaphic parameters, such as SOM, pH, and enzyme activities. Since the increasing of turf quality, biomass, and disease resistance were highly correlated with the changes of soil physiochemical parameters and microbial communities in turf mixture, which suggested that turf mixture with two species (i.e., Kentucky blue grass and Red fescue) changed soil microbial communities and enhanced visual turfgrass qualities through positive plant-soil interactions by soil biota. Frontiers Media S.A. 2020-10-28 /pmc/articles/PMC7656059/ /pubmed/33193137 http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fmicb.2020.556118 Text en Copyright © 2020 Xie, Zhang, Zheng, Liu, Yin, Sun, Saud, Shi, Yuan, Deng, Zhang, Cui and Chen. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY). The use, distribution or reproduction in other forums is permitted, provided the original author(s) and the copyright owner(s) are credited and that the original publication in this journal is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms.
spellingShingle Microbiology
Xie, Fuchun
Zhang, Gaoyun
Zheng, Qianjiao
Liu, Kemeng
Yin, Xiujie
Sun, Xiaoyang
Saud, Shah
Shi, Zhenjie
Yuan, Runli
Deng, Wenjing
Zhang, Lu
Cui, Guowen
Chen, Yajun
Beneficial Effects of Mixing Kentucky Bluegrass With Red Fescue via Plant-Soil Interactions in Black Soil of Northeast China
title Beneficial Effects of Mixing Kentucky Bluegrass With Red Fescue via Plant-Soil Interactions in Black Soil of Northeast China
title_full Beneficial Effects of Mixing Kentucky Bluegrass With Red Fescue via Plant-Soil Interactions in Black Soil of Northeast China
title_fullStr Beneficial Effects of Mixing Kentucky Bluegrass With Red Fescue via Plant-Soil Interactions in Black Soil of Northeast China
title_full_unstemmed Beneficial Effects of Mixing Kentucky Bluegrass With Red Fescue via Plant-Soil Interactions in Black Soil of Northeast China
title_short Beneficial Effects of Mixing Kentucky Bluegrass With Red Fescue via Plant-Soil Interactions in Black Soil of Northeast China
title_sort beneficial effects of mixing kentucky bluegrass with red fescue via plant-soil interactions in black soil of northeast china
topic Microbiology
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7656059/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33193137
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fmicb.2020.556118
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