Litcius/Paper detail

Functional and Taxonomic Effects of Organic Amendments on the Restoration of Semiarid Quarry Soils

Isabel Miralles, Raúl Ortega, André M. Comeau

2021mSystems14 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The restoration of soils impacted by human activities poses specific challenges regarding the reestablishment of functional microbial communities which will further support the reintroduction of plant species. Organic fertilizers, originating from either treated sewage or vegetable wastes, have shown promise in restoration experiments; however, we still do not have a clear understanding of the functional and taxonomic changes that occur during these treatments. We used metagenomics to profile restoration treatments applied to degraded, arid quarry soils in southern Spain. We found that the assortments of individual functions and taxa within each soil could clearly identify treatments, while at the same time they demonstrated high functional redundancy. Functions grouped into higher pathways tended to match physicochemical measurements made on the same soils. In contrast, significant taxonomic differences were seen when the treatments were previously studied with a single marker gene, highlighting the advantage of metagenomic analysis for complex soil communities.

Topics & Concepts

PhylumSoil waterMetagenomicsBiologyEcologyEnvironmental scienceAridMicrobial population biologyNutrientTaxonomic rankSoil microbiologyRestoration ecologyMicroorganismBiomass (ecology)USDA soil taxonomyAmendmentBiodiversitySoil respirationAgronomySoil classificationEnvironmental DNALand reclamationEcosystemTotal organic carbonSoil Carbon and Nitrogen DynamicsComposting and Vermicomposting TechniquesMycorrhizal Fungi and Plant Interactions