AI Article Synopsis

  • Flooded rice cultivation impacts soil properties such as redox potential and nutrient availability, which raises concerns about water usage and soil health.
  • A study in Brazil showed that bacterial communities in rice soils can recover after disturbances caused by draining and flooding but struggle to maintain stability over the long term.
  • Analysis revealed shifts in bacterial composition with increased Proteobacteria and changes in metabolic functions, highlighting the resilience of microbial communities and their importance for sustainable rice farming practices.

Article Abstract

Flooded rice cultivation, accounting for 75% of global rice production, significantly influences soil redox potential, element speciation, pH, and nutrient availability, presenting challenges such as extensive water usage and altered soil properties. This study investigates bacterial community dynamics in rice soils subjected to repeated draining and flooding in Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil. We demonstrate that bacterial communities exhibit remarkable resilience (the capacity to recover after being altered by a disturbance) but cannot remain stable after long-term exposure to environmental changes. The beta diversity analysis revealed four distinct community states after 11 draining/flooding cycles, indicating resilience over successive environment changes. However, the consistent environmental disturbance reduced microbial resilience, causing the bacterial community structure to shift over time. Those differences were driven by substitutions of taxa and functions and not by the loss of diversity. Notable shifts included a decline in Acidobacteria and an increase in Proteobacteria and Chloroflexi. Increased Verrucomicrobia abundance corresponded with lower pH levels. Functional predictions suggested dynamic metabolic responses, with increased nitrification during drained cycles and a surge in fermenters after the sixth cycle. Despite cyclic disturbances, bacterial communities exhibit resilience, contributing to stable ecosystem functioning in flooded rice soils. These findings enhance our understanding of microbial adaptation, providing insights into sustainable rice cultivation and soil management practices.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11602802PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00248-024-02468-yDOI Listing

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