Agricultural field
Introduction
“An agricultural "field system" generally refers to innovative elements of prehistoric and historic agricultural programs. Agriculture is a variably complicated process, and improvements and innovations in the part of a field system used in some civilizations such as the Maya and Tiwanaku are centered on improving access to water, elimination of weeds, facilitating growth and even some temperature control.” (Hirst)
Agricultural field can be defined as a field which is used for growing crops or some high-value plant species. This land is highly managed and contained artificial nutrients. Normally, only single plant species grows on agricultural field. It not only control the nutrient compounds, but also suppress growth of weed and pest.
Physical environment
pH
Soil pH is an important chemical property which affects the availability of nutrients in the soil and structure and activity of soil microbial community. These soil microorganisms have important functions that not only build soil structure, but also cycle organic matters and nitrogen compounds.
Most soil microorganisms and plants prefer neural pH of 6 to 7. It is because that the most soil nutrients compounds are available in this pH range. In deep layer of soil, anaerobic microorganisms produce organic acid by anaerobic respiration and fermentation. Furthermore, aerobic also generate proton ions with sulfur and ammonia oxidizing, and alter the soil pH. (D. M. Sylvia, J. J. Fuhrmann, P. G. Hartel, & D. A. Zuberer, 2005)
The low pH condition will suppress the availability of phosphorus which is the important nutrient to the plants in the soil. Besides, aluminum ions will become more available and might have negative effects for the plants to reducing crop yields. In agricultural field, nitrogen fertilizers, organic nutrient sources which contain compost and manure bring lots of nitric acid and sulfuric acid. These strong acids are increase in soil acidity and reducing pH of the soil. Lime is used to control pH. It not only increases the availability of nutrients from soil, but also provides extra calcium and magnesium for plants and soil microorganisms.
Soil structure
“Soil structure is defined as the arrangement of particles and associated pores in soils across the size range from nanometres to centimetres.” (Oades, 1993) It is important for providing flow pathway for water and nutrients. Aggregation of soil particles determinants the soil structure and microorganisms play important role for soil aggregation. Microorganisms can promote aggregation by extracellular poly saccharides, glomalin and hyphae, otherwise, soil microbes also can bind soil particles to create soil formation. Furthermore, the products of soil microorganisms, organic matters, are central factors for soil aggregation. (D. M. Sylvia, J. J. Fuhrmann, P. G. Hartel, & D. A. Zuberer, 2005)
In agricultural field, soil structure is disturbed by tillage, crop rotation and other human activities. Soilborne, tillage and using compost as fertilizer are the factors which can change the soil aggregation and soil microorganism communities. Otherwise, using lime and other inorganic materials are not only help controlling soil pH, but also impact soil aggregation, too.
The role of microorganisms in soil structure stabilizing is important, however, there are too many disturbs in farming land to reduce the function of microbes in the process of soil aggregation.
Factors of microbial community in agricultural field
Crop rotation
Crop rotation is a method which grows different type of crops in the same field in different time periods. It is one of the oldest cultural methods and the benefits contain pests and pathogens control. Rotation also can help increase and keep biodiversity and nutrients in the soil by the diverse essential nutrients of dissimilar crops.
Fertilization
Nitrogen (N) and Phosphorus (P) are the essential elements for lives. Crop fertilization is a important factor of the soil nutrient pools composition changes (Stevenson & Cole, 1999). The availability of nutrients also have reported that can influence soil microbial growth and activity (Broeckling, Broz, Bergelson, Manter, & Vivanco, 2008; da Silva & Nahas, 2002). Recently studies indicated that high concentration of NH4+ can inhibit NO3- uptake by fungi (Wang et al., 2007), otherwise, high soil phosphorus concentration also have reported to impact the soil bacteria, fungi, and arbuscular mycorrhizal (AM) fungi diversity. Furthermore, Soil fertility also has been proved to affect the microbial community compositions from different aspects which included the diversity, and activates (Fox & MacDonald, 2003; Wei et al., 2008).
Tillage
“Tillage is a mechanical stirring of soil surface to provide a suitable environment for seed germination and root growth” (D. M. Sylvia, J. J. Fuhrmann, P. G. Hartel, & B. D. A. Zuberer, 2005). Tillage overturns the soil and affect soil microbial community in several aspects which contain the Nitrogen transformation rates and the soil organic matter (SOM) increasing (Muruganandam, Israel, & Robarge, 2010; van Groenigen et al., 2010). These effects are not only promoting the soil carbon storage without change the soil microbial community structures, but also activation the microbes and increase the microbial biomass.
Microbial processes
Nitrogen cycle
Nitrogen is presented in various chemical forms which contain dinitrogen gas, organic nitrogen, ammonium and nitrate ions. The microbial consortia which involved in nitrogen cycle are playing important role. These bacteria have some functions that contain nitrogen fixing, ammonification, nitrification and denitrification. Excepting denitrification process, all processes of nitrogen cycle can increase nitrogen level in the soil and provide to plants as nitrogen sources (D. M. Sylvia, J. J. Fuhrmann, P. G. Hartel, & D. A. Zuberer, 2005).
In the nitrogen cycle, there are several enzymes involve to increasing the nitrogen pool in the soil which contain nitrogenase for nitrogen fixation; Gln Synthetase (GS), Glu 2-oxoglutarate (GOGAT) and Glu Dehydrogenase (GDH) for ammonification; ammonia monooxygenase and nitrite oxidoreductase for nitrification; and nitrate reductase, nitrite reductase and other enzymes for denitrification. The anaerobic process of denitrification removes the oxygen from nitrate and nitrite and also releases nitrogen gas from soil into the air. This can process remove the nitrogen from soil and also degrade soil fertility.
Nitrogen fixing bacteria
In modern agricultural field, artificial inorganic nitrogen sources take place the nitrogen from mineralization by soil microorganisms. Furthermore, high concentration of inorganic nitrogen compounds could inhibit the nitrogen fixing process by soil microbes. However, artificial nitrogen fixing need lots of energy for progressing. In order to reduce energy wasting and sustainable using natural resources, the organic farmer become a trend in the field of agriculture. The nitrogen sources of agricultural field are the important issues. Bacteria are the only organisms capable of taking nitrogen in the air and combining it with hydrogen to make ammonia. Nitrogen fixing bacteria are important in global nitrogen cycle and organic farming system. Some of them are symbiotic with plants by infection their roots system. Rhizobium is an important genus of nitrogen fixing bacteria, which infects the roots of the bean family (Fabaceae or Leguminosae).
Ammonification
Ammonification occurs in the soil which has aerobic environment and microorganisms are involved in the decay of dead organic matter. The end product of ammonification is ammonium. Otherwise, in anaerobic conditions, different microbial decay reactions will occur, and these produce nitrogen compounds known as amines. The bacteria that produce ammonia from organic compounds Bacillus, Clostridium, Proteus, Pseudomonas, and Streptomyces are called ammonifying bacteria
Nitrification
Nitrification is the process of nitrate producing from the oxidation of the reduced nitrogen compounds. Most of nitrification are processing by autotrophic microorganisms and have two steps of reaction. The first step of nitrification is ammonia oxidation which converse the ammonium to nitrite by ammonia oxidizing bacteria. The second step is nitrite oxidation which transforms nitrite to nitrate. Several heterotrophic microorganisms also have ability to oxidize either ammonium or organic nitrogen to nitrite or nitrate.(D. M. Sylvia, J. J. Fuhrmann, P. G. Hartel, & D. A. Zuberer, 2005) These micorogranisms include Nitrobacter, Nitrococcus, Nitrosococcus, and Nitrosomonas, Alcaligenes, Asprgillus and some actinomycetes
Some microbes can utilize nitrates to replace oxygen as electron acceptors and metabolize organic substances. This process reduces nitrates to nitrites and the nitrites is the end product for these bacteria. These bacteria which include (Nitrobacter, Nitrococcus, Nitrosococcus, and Nitrosomonas) are called nitrifying bacteria.
Denitrification
Some microbes can utilize nitrites as electron acceptors and metabolize organic substances. The end products of the process are free nitrous oxide and nitrogen gases which will release into the atmosphere. The bacteria belonging to this group which contains Alcaligenes, Bacillus, Paracoccus, Pseudomonas are called denitrifying bacteria.
Carbon cycle
The carbon cycle is of the most important cycle on earth. There are two major biological fluxes of carbon dioxide in nature which are photosynthetic fixation and respiration. Photosynthetic fixation can reduce and transfer carbon compounds form inorganic form to organic form. In respiration process, carbon dioxide is the Terminal Electron Acceptor in aerobic respiration and some of anaerobic respiration processes (Methanogenesis). In agricultural field, soil microbes are not directly linking with photosynthetic fixation. However, they are correlated with respiration interactions which contain ammonification, nitrification, denitrification and decomposition.
Decomposition is one part of carbon cycle and is progressed by microorganisms and soil microbes play an important role in this process. (Sylvia, et al., 2005). Soil microorganisms decompose the litters and transform as Soil organic matters (SOM). SOM also can be used as carbon source for soil microbes and the end product of decomposition is carbon dioxide which is released back into the atmosphere. In agricultural field, tillage and soilborne help plant residues breaking down faster and increasing aeration in the soil. These factors not only accelerate growth ratio of soil microorganisms, but also increase the decomposition processes which have associated with soil microbial community.
Key Microorganisms
Alphaproteobacteria
Legumes was recognized and used on agricultural very early in the history of agriculture. The root-nodule bacterium Rhizobium was identified to hace the ability of nitrogen fixation in 1888 (Sylvia, et al., 2005).
Another Alphaproteobacteria, Agrobacterium tumefaciens, is a very important bacterium for agriculture. Agrobacterium tumefaciens is the plant pathogen which has the ability to transfer DNA between itself and plants. It is used on genetically modified organism (GMO) to create higher yield and stress tolerant crops species.
Betaproteobacteria
Betaproteobacteria is an important soil bacterial group which has function of ammonia oxidation. Ammonia oxidation is an vital process that can transfer the Nitrogen forms and let plants easy to uptake nitrogen from soil and to increase the crop yield.
Bacteroidetes
There are serveral papers reported that Bacteroidetes had high abundances in the agricultural field, however, the functions of Bacteroidetes are not very clear. Flavobacterium sp is one of Bacteroidetes baceria which had report having denitrification genes (Spanning, Delgado, & Richardson, 2005) and might reveal the ecological niche of Bacteroidetes.
Acidobacteria
Actinobacteria are a group of Gram-positive bacteria with high G+C ratio (Ventura et al., 2007). They play an important role in decomposition of organic matters which contain cellulose and chitin. It also means that Actinobacteria takes part in the global carbon cycle. Furthermore, Actinobacteria are well-known bacteria group for produce antibiotics and it is also important for medical field.
Example of organisms within the group
Diverse microorganisms inhabit in agricultural field, which contain Proteobacteria, Actinobacteria, Acidobacteria, Bacteroidetes, Firmicutes and Fungi.
Agrobacterium tumefaciens Agrobacterium tumefaciens is a plant pathogen which has ability to transfer DNA between itself to plants. Agrobacterium is a good biotechnological tools and is used to make theses GMO foods in USA .
Nitrosomonas is a genus of chemoautotrophic bacteria which can uptake the energy from the ammonia oxidation process in aerobic environment. The artificial fertilizers which include Urea and anhydrous ammonia are used very often in the modern agricultural field. Ammonification can oxidize ammonia to nitrite and transfer to different form of N sources and it is very an important process for crops which uptake different forms of N sources.
Current Research
Soil microbial community is important and directly relates with the functions of soil. Before high throughput DNA fingerprinting identification technology publishing, it is nearly impossible to identify the soil microbial diversity. The disturbances of soil can affect the soil community structure. In previous study, Dr. Bornman and Dr. Triplett investigated soil microbial community in the Amazonia forest and pasture soil.(Borneman & Triplett, 1997)
The results indicated that microbial communities are significant differences and it might link to the pH and other factors of soil nutrients increasing which was caused by deforestation (Piccolo, Neill, & Cerri, 1994). In recent study, pyrosequencing technique, a high throughput DNA sequencing technology, was used to identify soil microbial diversity in the forest and agricultural soils (Roesch et al., 2007). The results demonstrated the richness of soil microbes are immense and the most abundant bacteria groups in three agricultural soils were Bacteroidetes, Betaproteobacteria and Alphaproteobacteria. Some bacteria which are contained in these three classes are linked with Nitrogen cycle. Furthermore, this report also demonstrated the diversity and the detecting technology of the soil microbial diversity and functions.
It is not only focusing on the soil microbial diversity, Soil organic matters (SOM) is also an important factor for crop yields and soil structure in agricultural fields. Ultuna Long-Term Soil Organic Matter Experiment is located at Ultuna which was established in 1956 Uppsala to study the effects of fertilizing and other factors in the agricultural system. In 2005, Dr. Enwall’s group published a paper report about relationship between soli and fertilizers which included different kinds of organic and inorganic fertilizers. The report showed that the addition fertilizers can affect the microbial activity and the composition of the denitrifying communities. Different molecular fingerprinting technology which contained ribosomal intergenic spacer region analysis (RISA), denaturing gradient gel electrophoresis (DGGE) and restriction fragment length polymorphism (RFLP) had demonstrated in this article for identifing the denitrifying bacterial communities. The results displayed that is not only the well-known bacterial class Alphaproteobacteria involving denitrifying process, some actinomycetes which belong to Actinobacteria also take part in this process at long term experimental agricultural field, too (Enwall, Philippot, & Hallin, 2005).
Land usage is another disturbance which can influence soil microbial community and functions. In 2009, Dr. Jesus’s group reported the relationship between land usage use systems and bacterial community composition (da C Jesus, Marsh, Tiedje, & de S Moreira, 2009). The results showed the bacterial community structure is correlated with the soil attributes and the bacterial communities are very different between crops and the forest soil.
References
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External links
Edited by student of Angela Kent at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign.
- ↑ Borneman, J., & Triplett, E. W. (1997). Molecular microbial diversity in soils from eastern Amazonia: Evidence for unusual microorganisms and microbial population shifts associated with deforestation. Applied and Environmental Microbiology, 63(7), 2647-2653.
- ↑ Broeckling, C. D., Broz, A. K., Bergelson, J., Manter, D. K., & Vivanco, J. M. (2008). Root exudates regulate soil fungal community composition and diversty. Applied and Environmental Microbiology, 74(3), 738-744.
- ↑ da C Jesus, E., Marsh, T. L., Tiedje, J. M., & de S Moreira, F. M. (2009). Changes in land use alter the structure of bacterial communities in Western Amazon soils. The ISME Journal.
- ↑ da Silva, P., & Nahas, E. (2002). Bacterial diversity in soil in response to different plants, phosphate fertilizers and liming. Brazilian Journal of Microbiology, 33(4), 304-310.
- ↑ Enwall, K., Philippot, L., & Hallin, S. (2005). Activity and composition of the denitrifying bacterial community respond differently to long-term fertilization. [Article]. Applied and Environmental Microbiology, 71(12), 8335-8343.
- ↑ Fox, C. A., & MacDonald, K. B. (2003). Challenges related to soil biodiversity research in agroecosystems - Issues within the context of scale of observation. Canadian Journal of Soil Science, 83(3), 231-244.
- ↑ Hirst, K. K. Agricultural Field Systems. from http://archaeology.about.com/bio/K-Kris-Hirst-3021.htm
- ↑ Piccolo, M. C., Neill, C., & Cerri, C. C. (1994). NATURAL-ABUNDANCE OF N-15 IN SOILS ALONG FOREST-TO-PASTURE CHRONOSEQUENCES IN THE WESTERN BRAZILIAN AMAZON BASIN. Oecologia, 99(1-2), 112-117.
- ↑ Roesch, L. F. W., Fulthorpe, R. R., Riva, A., Casella, G., Hadwin, A. K. M., Kent, A. D., et al. (2007). Pyrosequencing enumerates and contrasts soil microbial diversity. ISME Journal, 1(4), 283–290-283–290.
- ↑ Soil pH Modification. from http://www.extension.org/pages/Soil_pH_Modification
- ↑ Spanning, R., Delgado, M., & Richardson, D. (2005). The Nitrogen Cycle: Denitrification and its Relationship to N2 Fixation (pp. 277-342).
- ↑ Stevenson, F. J., & Cole, M. A. (1999). Cycles of soil: carbon, nitrogen, phosphorus, sulfur, micronutrients. Cycles of soil: carbon, nitrogen, phosphorus, sulfur, micronutrients., 427 pp.
- ↑ Sylvia, D. M., Fuhrmann, J. J., Hartel, P. G., & Zuberer, D. A. (2005). Principles and applications of soil microbiology (2nd ed.). Upper Saddle River, N.J.: Pearson Prentice Hall.
- ↑ Groenigen, K.-J., Bloem, J., Baath, E., Boeckx, P., Rousk, J., Bode, S., et al. (2010). Abundance, production and stabilization of microbial biomass under conventional and reduced tillage. [Article]. Soil Biology & Biochemistry, 42(1), 48-55.
- ↑ Ventura, M., Canchaya, C., Tauch, A., Chandra, G., Fitzgerald, G. F., Chater, K. F., et al. (2007). Genomics of Actinobacteria: Tracing the Evolutionary History of an Ancient Phylum. [10.1128/MMBR.00005-07]. Microbiology and Molecular Biology Reviews, 71(3), 495-548.
- ↑ Wang, Y., Li, W., Siddiqi, Y., Kinghorn, J. R., Unkles, S. E., & Glass, A. D. M. (2007). Evidence for post-translational regulation of NrtA, the Aspergillus nidulans high-affinity nitrate transporter. New Phytologist, 175(4), 699-706.
- ↑ Wei, D., Yang, Q., Zhang, J. Z., Wang, S., Chen, X. L., Zhang, X. L., et al. (2008). Bacterial community structure and diversity in a black soil as affected by long-term fertilization. Pedosphere, 18(5), 582-592.