AI Article Synopsis

  • The conversion of natural habitats to farmland has led to significant species loss globally, prompting researchers to study the impact of reduced soil disturbance through different tillage practices on soil microbial biodiversity.
  • The study involved sampling soil from fields with conventional tillage, reduced tillage, and no tillage, analyzing microbial communities using DNA metabarcoding to assess the effects of tillage intensity on community composition.
  • Findings showed that while tillage affected soil composition, all fields were more similar to other agricultural lands than to natural ecosystems, suggesting that restoring set-aside land may be more effective for biodiversity conservation than simply reducing tillage.

Article Abstract

The conversion of natural habitats into farmland has been a leading cause of species loss worldwide. Here, we investigated to what extent less intensive soil disturbance can mitigate this loss. Specifically, we examined whether reduced soil disturbance by tillage in agricultural fields could contribute to soil microbial biodiversity by providing a habitat for species that are limited by conventional tillage. To do so, we studied the diversity of soil biotas from three agricultural practices representing conventional tillage, reduced tillage and no tillage. Study fields were sampled by taking a bulk soil sample at the centre and edge of each field. The soil communities were recorded with environmental DNA metabarcoding using three molecular markers targeting bacteria, fungi and eukaryotes. While these three markers represent the vast majority of biotic variation in the soil, they will inevitably be dominated by the megadiverse microbiota of bacteria, microfungi and protists. We found a significant differentiation in community composition related to the intensity of tillage. Richness was weakly correlated to tillage, and more influenced by whether the sample was taken in the center or the edge of the field. Despite the significant effect of tillage on composition, comparisons with natural ecosystems revealed that all 30 study fields were much more similar in composition to other rotational fields than to more natural habitats, oldfields and leys. Despite a slightly higher similarity to oldfields and semi-natural grasslands, the contribution of no-till soil communities to biodiversity conservation is negligible, and our results indicate that restoration on set aside land may contribute more to conservation.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8847473PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s13280-021-01611-0DOI Listing

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