Abstract:
Objective Tall fescue (Festuca elata ‘crossfire II’) was used as the test material to study the effects of different levels of saline-alkali treatment on the diversity, composition and network complexity of bacterial and fungal communities in the rhizosphere soil of tall fescue.
Method Four salts (NaCl, Na2SO4, NaHCO3, and Na2CO3) were mixed in a 9∶1∶1∶9 M ratio, and four treatments of 0 (S0), 200 (S1), 400 (S2) and 600 mmol/L (S3) were set. Illumina MiSeq high-throughput sequencing was used to measure soil microbial community.
Result S1 and S2 saline-alkali treatments had no significant effect on soil fungal diversity and network complexity compared with S0 treatment, while S3 treatment significantly reduced soil fungal diversity and network complexity. Saline-alkali treatment also shifted fungal community composition, with increased relative abundances of dominant phyla Ascomycota and decreased relative abundances of Chytridiomycota. Compared with fungal community, saline-alkali treatment had less effect on soil bacterial community. S3 saline-alkali treatment reduced the complexity of soil bacterial network, but had no significant effect on bacterial diversity and community composition. SEM showed that the saline-alkali effects on soil fungal community composition were primarily mediated by soil organic carbon and soil available phosphorus).
Conclusion High concentration saline-alkali treatment reduced the diversity and network complexity of fungi in rhizosphere soil of tall fescue, and changed the composition of fungal community, but had little effect on bacterial community.