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Background: Intercropping increases land use efficiency and farmland ecological diversity. However, little is understood about whether and how soil biota, metabolites, and nutrients change under interspecific competition among plants. Thus, this study aimed to explore the changes in the physicochemical properties, microbial communities, and metabolites of rhizosphere and bulk soils of pepper monocropping and pepper-maize intercropping systems.
Results: Intercropping significantly increased the contents of available phosphorus (AP) and available potassium (AK), and decreased the pH value, whereas it had little effect on the total nitrogen (TN) and organic matter (OM) in the rhizosphere and bulk soils, compared with those in monocropping pepper. Moreover, the OM content was higher in rhizosphere soil than in bulk soil. The microbial community structures and metabolite profiles also differed between the two systems. The diversity of bacteria and fungi increased in intercropped pepper. The relative abundances of Actinobacteria, Chloroflexi, Cyanobacteria, and Ascomycota were higher while those of Proteobacteria, Planctomycetes, Mucoromycota, and Basidiomycota were significantly lower in the rhizosphere and bulk soils from the intercropping system than in those from the monocropping system. Linear discriminant analysis revealed that the predominant bacteria and fungi in the rhizosphere soil from the intercropping system belonged to the order Sphingomonadales and genera Nitrospira, Phycicoccus and Auricularia, whereas those in the bulk soil from the intercropping system belonged to the phylum Acidobacteria and genera Calocera, Pseudogymnoascus, and Trichosporon. Intercropping promoted the secretion of flavonoids, alkaloids, and nucleotides and their derivatives in the rhizosphere soil and significantly increased the contents of organoheterocyclic compounds in the bulk soil. Furthermore, the AP and AK contents, and pH value had strong positive correlations with bacteria. In addition, co-occurrence network analysis also showed that asebogenin, trachelanthamidine, 5-methyldeoxycytidine, and soil pH were the key factors mediating root-soil-microbe interactions.
Conclusion: Intercropping can alter microbial community structures and soil metabolite composition in rhizosphere and bulk soils, enhancing soil nutrient contents, enriching soil beneficial microbes and secondary metabolites (flavonoids and alkaloids) of intercropped pepper, and provided a scientific basis for sustainable development in the pepper-maize intercropping system.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s40793-024-00653-7 | DOI Listing |
Sci Total Environ
September 2025
Key Discipline Laboratory for National Defense for Biotechnology in Uranium Mining and Hydrometallurgy, University of South China, Heng yang 421001, Hunan, China; Southern Marine Science and Engineering Guangdong Laboratory (Zhuhai), School of Marine Science, State Key Laboratory for Biocontrol, Sun
Chelating agent contributes to the remediation of heavy metal contaminations, but it remains unclear how they affect the transformation of radioactive pollutants and microbial traits in phytoremediation. We comprehensively investigated on the uranium (U) speciation and microbial communities in the rhizosphere of Macleaya cordata, Paspalum scrobiculatum and Bamboo willow, and analyzed the accumulation of U in the three plants after the addition of chelating agents including 0.1 mmol kg siderophore (DFO) and 2.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFront Plant Sci
August 2025
Institute of Bast Fiber Crops and Center of Southern Economic Crops, Chinese Academy of Agricultural Sciences, Changsha, Hunan, China.
The southwestern, central, and northeastern regions of China are the primary cultivation areas for industrial hemp. Microorganisms within the soil-root continuum play a crucial role in plant health. However, the mechanisms by which these microbial communities respond to environmental gradients remain unclear.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPLoS One
September 2025
Institut Agro, Univ Rennes1, CNRS, IRMAR, Rennes, France.
For sustainable agriculture, soil-plant interactions (i.e., the rhizosphere effect) is prominent focus, since they determine plant health and nutrition.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSci Data
August 2025
State key Laboratory of Lake and Watershed Science for Water Security, Wuhan Botanical Garden, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Wuhan, 430074, China.
Rivers are dynamic ecosystems that play a crucial role in supporting microbial diversity and sustaining a wide range of ecological functions. Here, we used metagenomic sequencing datasets of channel sediments, riparian bulk soils, and riparian rhizosphere soils to construct metagenome-assembled genomes (MAGs) from 30 river wetlands along a latitudinal gradient in China. We identified 236 MAGs with completeness ≥ 50% and contamination ≤ 10%, including 225 bacteria and 11 archaea.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPlant Soil
November 2024
Georgina Mace Centre for the Living Planet, Department of Life Sciences, Imperial College, London, SL5 7PY England.
Aims: Forests across the world are subject to disturbance via wind, wildfire, and pest and disease outbreaks. Yet we still have an incomplete understanding of how these stressors impact forest biota-particularly the soil microbes, which govern forest carbon and nutrient cycling.
Methods: Here, we investigated the impact of a severe windstorm on soil bacterial communities in Kielder Forest, a temperate coniferous forest in the north of England.